The nurse is obtaining vital signs for a client who has acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Prior to entering the room, the nurse should do which of the following?
- A. Wear gloves and a gown.
- B. Perform hand hygiene.
- C. Review the client's viral load.
- D. Obtain a disposable stethoscope.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Hand hygiene is required before entering any client’s room to prevent infection spread. Gloves/gown, viral load review, and disposable stethoscopes are not routinely needed for AIDS.
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The nurse is educating the parents of a child who plans on riding their bicycle. Which statements, if made by the parents, indicate effective understanding?
- A. I should tell my child to ride their bike against the traffic pattern.
- B. I should instruct my child to walk their bike through busy intersection crosswalks.
- C. Wearing a helmet is only necessary when my child is riding near a busy intersection.
- D. My child can ride their bike barefoot as long as it's short distances.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Walking the bike through busy intersections enhances safety. Riding against traffic, optional helmet use, and barefoot riding are unsafe.
The nurse is applying soft wrist restraints to a client who is violent towards the nursing staff. Which actions by the nurse are appropriate? Select all that apply.
- A. Places a pair of scissors at the bedside for emergent discontinuation.
- B. Positions the client supine after applying both wrist restraints.
- C. Releases both restraints at the same time, every two hours.
- D. Informs the client of the behavior necessary to demonstrate to end the restraints.
- E. Ensures two fingers can be placed under each restraint.
Correct Answer: D,E
Rationale: Informing the client of expected behavior and ensuring a two-finger gap promote safety and compliance. Scissors are unsafe, supine positioning is not required, and simultaneous release is impractical.
The nurse is teaching a group of students about medications and fall prevention. The nurse would be correct in identifying which of the following medications can increase the risk for falls? Select all that apply.
- A. naproxen
- B. alprazolam
- C. bumetanide
- D. verapamil
- E. allopurinol
- F. thiamine
Correct Answer: B,C,D
Rationale: Alprazolam (benzodiazepine) causes sedation and dizziness, bumetanide (diuretic) can cause orthostatic hypotension, and verapamil (calcium channel blocker) can cause hypotension, all increasing fall risk. Naproxen, allopurinol, and thiamine do not significantly contribute to falls.
The nurse is having difficulty locating a vein, to start intravenous therapy, on a client who is dark-skinned. Which of these devices or procedures may be of benefit to you at this time?
- A. A doppler
- B. A surgical vein cut down
- C. A transillumination device
- D. A sonography
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A transillumination device uses light to visualize veins, aiding IV insertion in clients with dark skin or poor vein visibility. Doppler assesses blood flow, surgical cutdown is invasive, and sonography is not typically used for peripheral IVs.
The occupational health nurse is teaching a group of unlicensed assistive personnel how to practice appropriate ergonomics. It would be appropriate for the nurse to recommend that
- A. your feet are firmly on the floor while you are sitting in a chair
- B. Your feet are close together as you move or transfer a client.
- C. heavy objects are held far away from your body to achieve balance.
- D. you should squat to lift objects off of the ground.
- E. your neck should be extended as you look at the computer monitor.
Correct Answer: A,D
Rationale: Feet on the floor and squatting to lift reduce strain. A wide stance, holding objects close, and neutral neck position are correct ergonomic practices.
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