The nurse is caring for a client who has a pulmonary embolism. Which of the following findings would the nurse expect to observe? Select all that apply.
- A. dyspnea
- B. chest pain
- C. tachypnea
- D. hypoxemia
- E. bradycardia
- F. tracheal deviation
Correct Answer: A,B,C,D
Rationale: Pulmonary embolism obstructs pulmonary arteries, causing dyspnea, chest pain, tachypnea, and hypoxemia. Bradycardia is unlikely; tachycardia is typical. Tracheal deviation is associated with tension pneumothorax, not embolism.
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During a home visit, the community health nurse observes bruises in various stages of healing on the extremities and torso of an elderly client. The client explains that the bruises are from bumping into furniture and the well in the wheelchair. What is the priority nursing action?
- A. Ask the client to explain the bruises on the torso
- B. Assess the client's general hygiene and nutritional status
- C. Report the bruises to the client's health care provider (HCP)
- D. Talk to the client's child about the injuries
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Multiple bruises in various stages raise suspicion for elder abuse, requiring reporting to the HCP for investigation. Further questioning may cause distress, and hygiene/nutrition assessments are secondary. Discussing with family risks alerting potential abusers.
The nurse caring for multiple clients on a medical-surgical unit should delegate which action to the nursing assistant?
- A. Assist client, post hip fracture repair, to the bathroom
- B. Check the appearance of client's wound
- C. Discontinue nasogastric tube if client tolerates oral liquids
- D. Offer orange juice to client if bedside glucose reading is <70 mg/dL (3.9 mmol/L)
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Assisting with mobility, such as to the bathroom, is within the nursing assistant's scope. Wound assessment, tube discontinuation, and treating hypoglycemia require nursing judgment and are outside their scope.
The nurse is caring for a child who has had a tonsillectomy. Which of the following are appropriate nursing interventions? Select all that apply.
- A. Anticipate ear pain and give acetaminophen as needed
- B. Educate parents to expect the child to develop bad breath postoperatively
- C. Encourage the child to drink cold liquids through a straw
- D. Notify the health care provider about frequent, increased swallowing
- E. Use an oral suction device regularly to remove secretions from the back of the throat
Correct Answer: A,B,D
Rationale: Ear pain is common post-tonsillectomy due to referred pain, treated with acetaminophen. Bad breath is expected from healing tissue. Frequent swallowing may indicate bleeding, requiring provider notification. Cold liquids are soothing but straws risk trauma. Routine suctioning is unnecessary and risky.
The nurse is observing a nursing assistant transfer a client from bed to chair. Which observation needs correction? Select all that apply.
- A. The nursing assistant lowers the bed before starting the procedure.
- B. The nursing assistant sits the client on the side of the bed before assisting the client to move.
- C. The nursing assistant stands with feet close together and knees and back straight when helping the client to move.
- D. The nursing assistant asks the client to grab the arm of the nursing assistant during the transfer.
- E. The nursing assistant lifts the client up by tugging on the client's arms.
- F. The nursing assistant assists the client to stand and pivot to get into the chair.
Correct Answer: C,D,E
Rationale: The nursing assistant should stand with feet apart and knees bent to prevent injury, not grab the client's arm, and avoid tugging on the client's arms. Lowering the bed, sitting the client up, and assisting to pivot are correct.
A home care client is scheduled for dialysis. He asks the nurse if he should take his antihypertensive medication before going for dialysis. How should the nurse respond?
- A. He should take all regularly scheduled medications.
- B. Antihypertensives should not be taken before dialysis because the blood pressure drops during dialysis.
- C. He should check with the physician because it varies from person to person.
- D. He should take it with him and take it if his blood pressure rises during the treatment.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Antihypertensives are often held before dialysis to prevent hypotension, as dialysis can lower blood pressure. Routine administration, physician checks, or conditional dosing are less appropriate.