Which statement by the female client diagnosed with myasthenia gravis indicates the client needs more discharge teaching?
- A. I will not have any menstrual cycles because of this disease.
- B. I should avoid people who have respiratory infections.
- C. I should not take a hot bath or swim in cold water.
- D. I will drink at least 2,500 mL of water a day.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Myasthenia gravis does not affect menstrual cycles, indicating a need for teaching. Avoiding infections, temperature extremes, and hydration are correct.
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Which interventions should the nurse discuss with the female client who is positive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)? Select all that apply.
- A. Recommend the client not to engage in unprotected sexual activity.
- B. Instruct the client not to inform past sexual partners of HIV status.
- C. Tell the client to not donate blood, organs, or tissues.
- D. Suggest the client not get pregnant.
- E. Explain the client does not have to tell health-care personnel of HIV status.
Correct Answer: A,C,D
Rationale: Unprotected sex, blood/organ donation, and pregnancy risk HIV transmission or complications. Partner notification and informing healthcare personnel are recommended.
The client is experiencing an anaphylactic reaction to bee venom. Which interventions should the nurse implement? List in order of priority.
- A. Establish a patent airway.
- B. Administer epinephrine, an adrenergic agonist, IVP.
- C. Start an IV with 0.9% saline.
- D. Teach the client to carry an EpiPen when outside.
- E. Administer diphenhydramine (Benadryl), an antihistamine, IVP.
Correct Answer: A,B,C,E,D
Rationale: Priority: 1) Airway (ABCs); 2) Epinephrine (reverse anaphylaxis); 3) IV fluids (support hemodynamics); 4) Diphenhydramine (reduce histamine effects); 5) EpiPen teaching (prevention).
The 20-year-old female client diagnosed with advanced unremitting RA is being admitted to receive a regimen of immunosuppressive medications. Which question should the nurse ask during the admission process regarding the medications?
- A. Are you sexually active, and, if so, are you using birth control?
- B. Have you discussed taking these drugs with your parents?
- C. Which arm do you prefer to have an IV in for four (4) days?
- D. Have you signed an informed consent for investigational drugs?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Immunosuppressants are teratogenic, making contraception critical. Parental discussion, IV preference, and investigational consent are less relevant.
The client diagnosed with an acute exacerbation of SLE is being discharged with a prescription for an oral steroid which will be discontinued gradually. Which statement is the scientific rationale for this type of medication dosing?
- A. Tapering the medication prevents the client from having withdrawal symptoms.
- B. So the thyroid gland starts working, because this medication stops it from working.
- C. Tapering the dose allows the adrenal glands to begin to produce cortisol again.
- D. This is the health-care provider's personal choice in prescribing the medication.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Tapering steroids allows adrenal glands to resume cortisol production, preventing adrenal insufficiency. Withdrawal symptoms are secondary, thyroid is unaffected, and it’s not provider preference.
The client has had an anaphylactic reaction to insect venom, a bee sting. Which discharge instruction should the nurse discuss with the client?
- A. Take a corticosteroid dose pack when stung by a bee.
- B. Take antihistamines prior to outdoor activities.
- C. Use a cromolyn sodium (Intal) inhaler prophylactically.
- D. Carry a bee sting kit, especially when going outside.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Carrying a bee sting kit (EpiPen) is critical for managing future anaphylaxis. Steroids, antihistamines, and cromolyn are less effective prophylactically.