What type of conflict refers to when there are two or more opposing incompatible demands that arise and priority differences affect the resolution of the conflict?
- A. Interpersonal conflict
- B. Organizational conflict
- C. Intrapersonal conflict
- D. None of Above
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Intrapersonal conflict involves internal demands, unlike interpersonal, organizational, or none. Nurse managers address this like duty vs. family contrasting with team clashes. It's key in healthcare for staff well-being, aligning leadership with personal support.
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The major focus on self-awareness has been to emphasize the positive aspects that this can have. Self-awareness also has two negative extremes or traps. One of these traps is:
- A. Focusing on oneself can lead to increased self-esteem
- B. Focusing on the self can highlight shortcomings
- C. Focusing on oneself can lead to greater accuracy in evaluating oneself
- D. Focusing on the self can highlight ones strengths
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Highlighting shortcomings is a trap, unlike esteem, accuracy, or strengths. Nurse leaders like over-criticism avoid this, contrasting with balance. In healthcare, it's constructive, aligning leadership with reflection.
A nurse is reviewing informed consent with a client who is scheduled for a cardiac catheterization. Which of the following is the responsibility of the nurse?
- A. Explaining the procedure's risks
- B. Obtaining the client's signature
- C. Verifying the client's understanding of the procedure being performed
- D. Scheduling the procedure
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The nurse's role in informed consent is to ensure the client comprehends the procedure, supporting autonomy and legal standards. Verifying the client's understanding of the cardiac catheterization its purpose, process, and implications confirms they can articulate it, ensuring consent is truly informed, not just signed. Explaining risks is the provider's duty, as they perform the procedure and bear legal responsibility for disclosure. Obtaining the signature is procedural but secondary to comprehension, often a clerical task. Scheduling is logistical, unrelated to consent. Verification bridges provider explanation and client decision, empowering the client and protecting the healthcare team by validating that consent reflects genuine understanding, not coercion or confusion.
A nurse from a facility's float pool receives an assignment to float on a nursing unit. The float nurse tells the charge nurse that she has never worked on this unit before. How should the charge nurse respond?
- A. I will assign you to work with a registered nurse on the unit who is experienced and will act as a resource for you'
- B. You'll figure it out as you go'
- C. I'll reassign you elsewhere'
- D. Work only with the AP staff'
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: A float nurse unfamiliar with a unit needs support to ensure competent care. Responding I will assign you to work with a registered nurse on the unit who is experienced and will act as a resource for you' provides a skilled mentor, easing the transition with real-time guidance on unit specifics protocols, clients, equipment. This leverages the float pool's purpose, builds capacity, and safeguards quality, especially with likely future floats. Figure it out' risks errors from inexperience, reassigning wastes resources, and limiting to APs restricts scope and learning. Pairing with an RN fosters collaboration, confidence, and safety, aligning with leadership's role in resource allocation and staff development.
Nonstress test in a 36-week pregnancy is reported as reactive. What does the nurse anticipate should be required?
- A. The test has to be repeated for 20 minutes more
- B. An oxytocin drip will be initiated and the test repeated
- C. Reassurance can be offered
- D. The client has to be prepared for C-section
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A reactive NST at 36 weeks means reassurance, not repeat testing, oxytocin, or C-section. Fetal heart accelerations show well-being no intervention needed, unlike nonreactive results. Leadership expects this imagine calm parents; it aligns with obstetric care effectively. This reflects nursing's role in fetal monitoring.
As a nurse manager, you want to institute point-of-care devices on your unit. The rationale that you provide to support the point-of-care devices includes:
- A. reduction in incidents of medication error
- B. immediate documentation of care
- C. comparison of patient data with previous data
- D. immediate access to staffing schedules
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Point-of-care devices, like bedside scanners or tablets, enhance care by enabling real-time actions. A primary rationale is reducing medication errors e.g., through bar-code scanning to verify drugs and patient identity before administration, catching mistakes instantly. This directly improves safety, a compelling argument for adoption. Immediate documentation and data comparison are benefits, streamlining workflow and informing decisions, but error reduction is a stronger, more urgent driver tied to patient outcomes. Access to staffing schedules is unrelated to clinical care delivery. Emphasizing medication error reduction highlights a tangible, evidence-supported impact, aligning with safety priorities and likely securing support for implementation.