Which of the following is a characteristic of health-related hardiness known as 'challenge'?
- A. Confidence to appraise a health stressor
- B. Ability to modify responses to health stressors
- C. Viewing a health stressor as an opportunity for growth
- D. Optimal psychosocial adaptation to a health stressor
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Hardiness' challenge sees stressors as growth shots not just sizing up, tweaking, or adapting a mindset nurses foster in chronic fights. It's flipping pain to gain, a resilient twist.
You may also like to solve these questions
The nurse understands that the physician would need to be notified regarding a chemotherapy dose if the client experiences:
- A. Fatigue
- B. Nausea and vomiting
- C. Stomatitis
- D. Bone marrow suppression
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Chemotherapy's marrow hit bone marrow suppression drops counts like neutrophils or platelets, risking infection or bleeding, a dose-limiting toxicity needing physician review to adjust or pause treatment. Fatigue, nausea, and stomatitis are common, manageable with nursing care rest, antiemetics, mouth rinses unless extreme. Suppression's severity, tied to labs (e.g., ANC <500), halts therapy to protect the client, a critical threshold nurses monitor, distinguishing it from routine side effects, ensuring safety in this marrow-bashing regimen.
An HIV-positive patient presents to the ED complaining of shortness of breath and non-productive cough. Chest x-ray shows diffuse interstitial infiltrates, and O2 saturation is 85% on room air. All of the following statements regarding this patient's probable diagnosis are TRUE, EXCEPT
- A. Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) is the most common opportunistic infection in AIDS patients
- B. Pentamidine isothionate is an effective alternate therapy to TMP-SMX
- C. A normal chest x-ray rules out acute PCP infection
- D. 65% of patients relapse within 18 months
Correct Answer: H
Rationale: PCP top AIDS bug, pentamidine swaps TMP-SMX, relapse hits, steroids for hypoxia; normal CXR misses 20%. Nurses nix this chronic x-ray lie.
The nurse educates the client that besides an echocardiogram, which of the following tests is the best tool for diagnosing heart failure?
- A. Pulmonary artery catheter
- B. Mitigated angiographic (MUGA) scan
- C. B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP)
- D. Radionuclide studies
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: BNP, a blood test, spikes with heart stretch heart failure's calling card, outshining invasive tools for diagnosis. Pulmonary catheters measure pressures, not routine. MUGA scans ejection fraction, less direct. Radionuclide's vague here. Nurses teach BNP's ease and accuracy, a biomarker gold standard, syncing with echo to nail heart failure's fluid tale.
Which patient is at greatest risk for pancreatic cancer?
- A. An elderly black male with a history of smoking and alcohol use
- B. A young, white obese female with no known health issues
- C. A young black male with juvenile onset diabetes
- D. An elderly white female with a history of pancreatitis
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Pancreatic cancer risk escalates with specific factors: age, race, smoking, and alcohol. An elderly Black male with smoking and alcohol history tops the list incidence peaks in older adults, Black populations face higher rates, and both habits are strong carcinogens, damaging pancreatic tissue over time. A young, obese white female has obesity as a risk, but youth and fewer exposures lower her odds. A young Black male with diabetes links to a risk factor, yet juvenile onset and age reduce immediate concern. An elderly white female with pancreatitis has a notable risk chronic inflammation predisposes but lacks the compounded impact of smoking and alcohol. The elderly Black male's profile aligns with epidemiological data, making him the nurse's focus for vigilant monitoring and early detection efforts.
Which of the following is an example of multimorbidity?
- A. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and a urinary tract infection
- B. Lung cancer and pneumonia
- C. Chronic kidney disease and appendicitis
- D. Diabetes and exacerbation of rheumatoid arthritis
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Multimorbidity means chronic twins diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis flare together, a dual load, not acute add-ons like UTIs, pneumonia, or appendicitis. Those flare fast and fade; chronic pairs grind on, tangled or not, a nurse's radar for complex care, a hallmark of long-haul illness overlap.
Nokea