The nurse is receiving a client from the postanesthesia care unit (PACU). Which interventions should the nurse implement? Select all that apply.
- A. Ambulate the client to the bathroom to void.
- B. Take the client's vital signs to compare with PACU data.
- C. Monitor all lines into and out of the client's body.
- D. Assess the client's surgical site.
- E. Push the client's PCA button to treat for pain during movement.
Correct Answer: B,C,D
Rationale: Vital signs establish a baseline, line monitoring ensures patency, and surgical site assessment detects complications. Ambulation is premature, and nurses cannot push PCA buttons.
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The nurse is caring for a client in acute pain as a result of surgery. Which intervention should the nurse implement?
- A. Administer pain medication as soon as the time frame allows.
- B. Use nonpharmacological methods to replace medications.
- C. Use cryotherapy after heat therapy because it works faster.
- D. Instruct family members to administer medication with the PCA.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Administering pain medication PRN within time frames ensures timely relief, per pain management standards. Nonpharmacological methods supplement, cryotherapy timing varies, and family PCA use is unsafe.
The unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP) can be overheard talking loudly to the scrub technologist discussing a problem which occurred during one (1) of the surgeries. Which intervention should the nurse in the surgical holding area with a female client implement?
- A. Close the curtains around the client's stretcher.
- B. Instruct the UAP and scrub tech to stop the discussion.
- C. Tell the surgeon on the case what the nurse overheard.
- D. Inform the client the discussion was not about her surgeon.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Instructing the UAP and tech to stop protects patient privacy and reduces anxiety, per HIPAA. Curtains, informing the surgeon, or reassuring the client are less direct.
The circulating nurse observes the surgical scrub technician remove a sponge from the edge of the sterile field with a clamp and place the sponge and clamp in a designated area. Which action should the nurse implement?
- A. Place the sponge back where it was.
- B. Tell the technician not to waste supplies.
- C. Do nothing because this is the correct procedure.
- D. Take the sponge out of the room immediately.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Removing a potentially contaminated sponge from the sterile field edge is correct to maintain asepsis. Replacing, criticizing, or removing it immediately is incorrect.
The circulating nurse is positioning clients for surgery. Which client has the greatest potential for nerve damage?
- A. The 16-year-old client in the dorsal recumbent position having an appendectomy.
- B. The 68-year-old client in the Trendelenburg position having a cholecystectomy.
- C. The 45-year-old client in the reverse Trendelenburg position having a biopsy.
- D. The 22-year-old client in the lateral position having a nephrectomy.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The lateral position risks brachial plexus or peroneal nerve damage due to pressure on dependent limbs, especially during prolonged surgery like nephrectomy. Other positions have lower nerve risks.
The circulating nurse observes the surgeon tossing a bloody gauze sponge onto the sterile field. Which action should the circulating nurse implement first?
- A. Include the sponge in the sponge count.
- B. Obtain a new sterile instrument pack.
- C. Tell the surgical technologist about the sponge.
- D. Throw the sponge in the sterile trashcan.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Telling the technologist ensures the contaminated sponge is removed from the sterile field, maintaining asepsis. Counting, new instruments, or trashing are secondary or incorrect.