The wife of a client diagnosed with myasthenia gravis is crying and shares with the nurse she just doesn't know what to do. Which response is the best action by the nurse?
- A. Discuss the Myasthenia Foundation with the client's wife.
- B. Refer the client to a local myasthenia gravis support group.
- C. Ask the client's wife if she would like to talk to a counselor.
- D. Sit down and allow the wife to ventilate her feelings to the nurse.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Allowing the wife to ventilate feelings is therapeutic, addressing immediate emotional distress. Foundation discussion, support groups, and counseling are secondary.
You may also like to solve these questions
The client diagnosed with Systemic Response Inflammatory Syndrome (SIRS) asks the nurse what the diagnosis means. Which is the nurse's best response?
- A. SIRS is a localized response to major trauma that has occurred within the last three (3) months.
- B. SIRS is a syndrome of potential responses to illness that has an optimum prognosis.
- C. SIRS is a respiratory response to the client having had a myocardial infarction or pneumonia.
- D. SIRS is a systemic response to a variety of insults, including infection, ischemia, and injury.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: SIRS is a systemic response to insults like infection or trauma. It is not localized, has variable prognosis, and is not solely respiratory.
The client diagnosed with Guillain-Barré syndrome is having difficulty breathing and is placed on a ventilator. Which situation warrants immediate intervention by the nurse?
- A. The ventilator rate is set at 14 breaths per minute.
- B. A manual resuscitation bag is at the client's bedside.
- C. The client's pulse oximeter reading is 85%.
- D. The ABG results are pH 7.4, PaO2 88, PaCO2 35, and HCO3 24.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A pulse oximeter reading of 85% indicates hypoxemia, requiring immediate intervention. Ventilator rate, resuscitation bag, and normal ABGs are appropriate.
Which signs/symptoms make the nurse suspect the most common opportunistic infection in the female client diagnosed with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)?
- A. Fever, cough, and shortness of breath.
- B. Oral thrush, esophagitis, and vaginal candidiasis.
- C. Abdominal pain, diarrhea, and weight loss.
- D. Painless violet lesions on the face and tip of nose.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Fever, cough, and shortness of breath indicate Pneumocystis pneumonia, the most common AIDS opportunistic infection. Candidiasis, GI symptoms, and Kaposi’s sarcoma are less frequent.
Which intervention has the highest priority when caring for a client diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis?
- A. Encourage the client to ventilate feelings about the disease process.
- B. Discuss the effects of disease on the client's career and other life roles.
- C. Instruct the client to perform most important activities in the morning.
- D. Teach the client the proper use of hot and cold therapy to provide pain relief.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Hot and cold therapy directly relieves RA pain, a priority. Emotional ventilation, career impact, and morning activity are secondary.
The nurse enters the room of a female client diagnosed with SLE and finds the client crying. Which statement is the most therapeutic response?
- A. I know you are upset, but stress makes the SLE worse.
- B. Please explain to me why you are crying.
- C. I recommend going to an SLE support group.
- D. I see you are crying. We can talk if you would like.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Acknowledging crying and offering to talk is therapeutic, encouraging emotional expression. Linking stress to SLE, demanding explanations, or suggesting groups are less supportive.