Too narrow cuff will cause what change in the Client's BP?
- A. True high reading
- B. True low reading
- C. False high reading
- D. False low reading
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A narrow cuff e.g., under-sized overcompresses, yielding a false high BP e.g., 140/90 vs. true 120/80. True readings need proper fit; wide cuffs may lower falsely. Nurses select cuffs e.g., per arm size for accuracy, per measurement standards.
You may also like to solve these questions
The nurse is providing dietary instruction for a client with hypoglycemia. To prevent hypoglycemic reactions, the nurse should instruct the client to:
- A. Eat a candy bar if he feels lightheaded
- B. Always carry a quick source of sugar
- C. Limit his intake of fluids with meals
- D. Avoid eating large meals
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Carrying a quick sugar source (e.g., glucose tabs) prevents hypoglycemic reactions by rapidly raising blood sugar candy is less precise, fluid limits are unrelated, and large meals don't directly cause drops. Nurses teach this, ensuring safety, critical for hypoglycemia management.
The goal of nursing is to put the patient in the best condition for nature to act upon him'. This was stated by
- A. Henderson
- B. Jean Watson
- C. Marta Rogers
- D. Florence Nightingale
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: This quote reflects a historical view of nursing as facilitating natural healing, attributed to Florence Nightingale, the founder of modern nursing. In her 1859 work, *Notes on Nursing*, she emphasized optimizing the patient's environment cleanliness, air, and rest for recovery. Henderson defined nursing through 14 basic needs, Watson focused on caring theory, and Rogers developed a science of unitary beings none match this phrasing. Nightingale's philosophy shaped nursing's focus on holistic care, influencing practice for centuries by prioritizing patient conditions over direct intervention.
The nurse double-checked Mr. Gary's meds to avoid mistakes. This is an example of?
- A. Safety
- B. Quality improvement
- C. Patient-centered care
- D. Telemedicine
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Double-checking meds is safety (A) preventing harm, per care standards. QI (B) enhances, patient-centered (C) tailors, telemedicine (D) remote not error-specific. A fits safety's focus, making it correct.
All of the following are purpose of inflammation except
- A. Increase heat, thereby produce abatement of phagocytosis
- B. Localized tissue injury by increasing capillary permeability
- C. Protect the issue from injury by producing pain
- D. Prepare for tissue repair
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Inflammation aims to protect and heal tissue, not hinder it. Increasing heat (A) enhances phagocytosis by boosting immune cell activity, not abating it, making this statement incorrect and the exception. Localized injury response (B) occurs as capillary permeability increases, delivering immune cells to the site. Pain (C) protects by discouraging movement, aiding healing. Preparing for tissue repair (D) is a key goal as inflammation clears debris and initiates recovery. The misstatement in A reverses the biological role of heat, which supports immune function rather than suppressing it, confirming A as the answer since it does not align with inflammation's purposes.
Which of the following do not correctly correlates the increase BP of Ms. Aida, a 70 year old diabetic?
- A. Females, after the age 65 tends to have lower BP than males
- B. Disease process like Diabetes increase BP
- C. BP is highest in the morning, and lowest during the night
- D. Africans, have a greater risk of hypertension than Caucasian and Asians.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Females over 65 often have higher BP e.g., post-menopause not lower, contradicting Aida's rise. Diabetes (vessel damage), morning peaks (circadian), African risk (genetics) align. Nurses note this e.g., elderly diabetics for management.