Which of the following statement best describe spiritual care in nursing?
- A. Ignoring beliefs
- B. Supporting spiritual needs
- C. A medical fix
- D. A one-time talk
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Spiritual care is supporting spiritual needs (B), per nursing e.g., prayer support. Not ignoring (A), not medical (C), not one-time (D) holistic focus. B best defines its role, enhancing Mr. Gary's well-being, making it correct.
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You are about to write an information on the Kardex. There are 4 available writing instruments to use. Which of the following should you use?
- A. Mongol #2
- B. Permanent Ink
- C. A felt or fountain pen
- D. Pilot Pentel Pen marker
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Permanent ink (B) is required for Kardex to ensure legible, lasting records, per legal standards. Pencil (A) erases, felt/fountain pens (C) smudge, markers (D) fade. B ensures accuracy, making it correct.
Which activity is an example of health promotion by the nurse
- A. Administering immunizations
- B. Giving a bedbath
- C. Preventing complications after an accident
- D. Performing diagnostic procedures
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Health promotion enhances well-being and prevents disease proactively administering immunizations (e.g., measles vaccine) exemplifies this, boosting immunity before illness strikes. Giving a bedbath is hygiene, not promotion supportive, not preventive. Preventing complications post-accident is tertiary prevention, managing existing issues, not promoting health preemptively. Diagnostic procedures (e.g., blood tests) detect, not promote assessment, not prevention. Immunizations align with health promotion's focus on empowering clients against disease, a core nursing role in public health, making this the standout example.
Which of the following statement is NOT true about tort law in nursing?
- A. Covers wrongful acts
- B. Includes negligence
- C. Always criminal
- D. May involve compensation
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Tort law covers wrongs (A), includes negligence (B), may compensate (D) 'always criminal' (C) isn't true, civil not criminal, per law. C's criminality misstates tort's civil focus, like Mr. Gary's potential claim, making it untrue.
The nurse enters the room to give a prescribed medication but the patient is inside the bathroom. What should the nurse do?
- A. Leave the medication at the bedside and leave the room.
- B. After a few minutes, return to that patient's room and do not leave until the patient takes the medication.
- C. Instruct the patient to take the medication and leave it at the bedside.
- D. Wait for the patient to return to bed and just leave the medication at the bedside.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Returning after a few minutes and staying until the patient takes the medication ensures safe administration, adhering to the 'Five Rights' right patient, drug, dose, route, and time. The nurse verifies ingestion, preventing errors like missed doses or misuse, and documents accurately. Leaving medication unattended risks it being lost, taken incorrectly, or accessed by others, violating safety protocols. Instructing without supervision assumes compliance but lacks confirmation, potentially falsifying records if the dose isn't taken. Waiting briefly then leaving it bedside still neglects oversight. Returning and remaining present balances respect for the patient's privacy with accountability, ensuring the medication reaches its intended recipient at the prescribed time, critical for treatment efficacy and legal standards in nursing practice.
What do you think is the most important nursing order in a client with major head trauma who is about to receive bolus enteral feeding?
- A. Measure intake and output
- B. Check albumin level
- C. Monitor glucose levels
- D. Increase enteral feeding
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Monitoring I&O ensures fluid balance with hyperosmotic enteral feeding.
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