When admitting a patient who has just arrived on the medical unit with severe abdominal pain, what should the nurse do first?
- A. Complete only basic demographic data before addressing the patient's abdominal pain.
- B. Medicate the patient for the abdominal pain before attending to the health history and examination.
- C. Inform the patient that the abdominal pain will be treated as soon as the health history is completed.
- D. Take the initial vital signs and then deal with the abdominal pain before completing the health history.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The patient priority in this situation will be to decrease the pain level because the patient will be unlikely to cooperate in providing demographic data or the health history until the nurse addresses the pain. However, obtaining information about vital signs is essential before using either pharmacological or nonpharmacological therapies for pain control. The vital signs may indicate hemodynamic instability that would need to be addressed immediately.
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During the health history interview, a patient tells the nurse about periodic fainting spells. Which question by the nurse will be most helpful in determining the setting in which the fainting spells occur?
- A. How frequently do you have the fainting spells?
- B. Where are you when you have the fainting spells?
- C. Do the spells tend to occur at any special time of day?
- D. Do you have any other symptoms along with the spells?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Information about the setting is obtained by asking where the patient was and what the patient was doing when the symptom occurred. The other questions from the nurse are appropriate for obtaining information about chronology, frequency, and associated clinical manifestations.
The nurse is completing a neurological assessment on an adult patient. Which of the following assessments should the nurse include when assessing the patient's coordination?
- A. Toe walk
- B. Finger to nose
- C. Drift
- D. Romberg
- E. Heel to opposite shin
Correct Answer: B,D,E
Rationale: A neurological assessment is completed to observe motor status by assessing gait, toe and heel walk, and drift, whereas when assessing coordination, the nurse observes finger to nose, Romberg sign, and heel to opposite shin.
A patient is seen in the emergency department with chest pain and hypotension. Which type of assessment should the nurse do at this time?
- A. Focused
- B. Subjective
- C. Emergency
- D. Comprehensive
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Since the patient is hemodynamically unstable, an emergency assessment is needed. Comprehensive and focused assessments may be needed after the patient is stabilized. Subjective information is needed, but objective data such as vital signs also are essential for the unstable patient.
While the nurse is taking the health history, a patient states, 'My father and grandfather both had heart attacks and were unable to be very active afterwards.' This statement reflects which of the following functional health patterns?
- A. Activity-exercise
- B. Cognitive-perceptual
- C. Coping-stress tolerance
- D. Health perception-health management
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The information in the patient statement relates to risk factors that may cause cardiovascular problems in the future. Identification of risk factors falls into the health perception-health maintenance pattern.
When assessing the circulation to the lower leg of a patient who has had knee surgery, which action should the nurse take first?
- A. Feel for the temperature of the foot.
- B. Visually inspect the colour of the foot.
- C. Check the patient's pedal pulses using the fingertips.
- D. Compress the nail beds to determine capillary refill time.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Inspection is the first of the major techniques used in the physical examination. Palpation and auscultation are used later in the examination.
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