The nurse must be knowledgeable of ethical principles. Which is an example of the ethical principle of justice?
- A. The nurse administers a placebo, and the client asks if it will help the pain.
- B. The nurse accepts a work assignment in an area in which he or she is not experienced.
- C. The nurse refuses to tell a family member the client has a positive HIV test.
- D. The nurse provides an indigent client with safe and appropriate nursing care.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Justice ensures equitable care, like providing safe care to an indigent client. Placebos (deception), incompetence, or confidentiality are unrelated to justice.
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The nurse pronounced Dr. Smith's client to be clinically dead. Which should the nurse document on the client's chart?
- A. Brain scan indicates no brain wave activity, client pronounced deceased. Family refuses to talk with organ bank.
- B. Cardiac arrest noted, CPR initiated but unsuccessful. Pronounced dead.
- C. Pulse, respirations, and blood pressure absent at 0900, pronounced dead. Dr. Smith to sign death certificate.
- D. Client found without pulse, body cold to touch. Pronounced deceased at 0900.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Documentation should include objective findings (absent vital signs), time, and physician’s role, per legal standards. Brain scan or CPR details are specific, and cold body is insufficient.
Which act protects the nurse against a malpractice claim when the nurse stops at a motor-vehicle accident and renders emergency care?
- A. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
- B. The State Nurse Practice Act.
- C. The Emergency Rendering Aid Act.
- D. The Good Samaritan Act.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The Good Samaritan Act protects nurses providing emergency care voluntarily, limiting malpractice liability. HIPAA, Nurse Practice Act, or fictional acts don’t apply.
The client diagnosed with diabetes mellitus type 2 wants to be an organ donor and asks the nurse, 'Which organs can I donate?' Which statement is the nurse's best response?
- A. It is wonderful you want to be an organ donor. Let's discuss this.
- B. You can donate any organ in your body, except the pancreas.
- C. You have to donate your body to science to be an organ donor.
- D. You cannot donate any organs, but you can donate some tissues.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Type 2 diabetes may contraindicate organ donation (e.g., kidneys, pancreas) due to vascular damage, but tissues (e.g., corneas) are often viable. Other responses are inaccurate.
The client is being discharged from the hospital for intractable pain secondary to cancer and is prescribed morphine, a narcotic. Which statement indicates the client understands the discharge instructions?
- A. I will be sure to have my prescriptions filled before any holiday.
- B. There should not be a problem having the prescriptions filled anytime.
- C. If I run out of medications, I can call the HCP to phone in a prescription.
- D. There are no side effects to morphine I should be concerned about.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Filling prescriptions before holidays ensures access to narcotics, reflecting understanding of controlled substance challenges. Other statements are inaccurate or unsafe.
The HCP has notified the family of a client in a persistent vegetative state on a ventilator of the need to 'pull the plug.' The client does not have an AD or a durable power of attorney for health care, and the family does not want their loved one removed from the ventilator. Which action should the nurse implement?
- A. Refer the case to the hospital ethics committee.
- B. Tell the family they must do what the HCP orders.
- C. Follow the HCP's order and 'pull the plug.'
- D. Determine why the client did not complete an AD.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Without an AD or proxy, disagreements between family and HCP require ethics committee review for resolution. Forcing compliance, following orders against family wishes, or investigating AD absence is inappropriate.