While developing the plan of care for a new patient on the unit, the nurse must identify expected outcomes that are appropriate for the new patient. What resource should the nurse prioritize for identifying these appropriate outcomes?
- A. Community Specific Outcomes Classification (CSO)
- B. Nursing-Sensitive Outcomes Classification (NOC)
- C. State Specific Nursing Outcomes Classification (SSNOC)
- D. Department of Health and Human Services Outcomes Classification (DHHSOC)
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Resources for identifying appropriate expected outcomes include the NOC and standard outcome criteria established by health care agencies for people with specific health problems. The other options are incorrect because they do not exist.
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During report, a nurse finds that she has been assigned to care for a patient admitted with an opportunistic infection secondary to AIDS. The nurse informs the clinical nurse leader that she is refusing to care for him because he has AIDS. The nurse has an obligation to this patient under which legal premise?
- A. Good Samaritan Act
- B. Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC)
- C. Patient Self-Determination Act
- D. ANA Code of Ethics
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The ethical obligation to care for all patients is clearly identified in the first statement of the ANA Code of Ethics for Nurses. The Good Samaritan Act relates to lay people helping others in need. The NIC is a standardized classification of nursing treatment that includes independent and collaborative interventions. The Patient Self-Determination Act encourages people to prepare advance directives in which they indicate their wishes concerning the degree of supportive care to be provided if they become incapacitated.
The nursing instructor cites a list of skills that support critical thinking in clinical situations. The nurse should describe skills in which of the following domains?
- A. Self-esteem
- B. Self-regulation
- C. Inference
- D. Autonomy
- E. Interpretation
Correct Answer: B,C,E
Rationale: Skills needed in critical thinking include interpretation, analysis, evaluation, inference, explanation, and self-regulation. Self-esteem and autonomy would not be on the list because they are not skills.
The care team has deemed the occasional use of restraints necessary in the care of a patient with Alzheimers disease. What ethical violation is most often posed when using restraints in a long-term care setting?
- A. It limits the patients personal safety.
- B. It exacerbates the patients disease process.
- C. It threatens the patients autonomy.
- D. It is not normally legal.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Because safety risks are involved when using restraints on elderly confused patients, this is a common ethical problem, especially in long-term care settings. By definition, restraints limit the individuals autonomy. Restraints are not without risks, but they should not normally limit a patients safety. Restraints will not affect the course of the patients underlying disease process, though they may exacerbate confusion. The use of restraints is closely legislated, but they are not illegal.
A recent nursing graduate is aware of the differences between nursing actions that are independent and nursing actions that are interdependent. A nurse performs an interdependent nursing intervention when performing which of the following actions?
- A. Auscultating a patients apical heart rate during an admission assessment
- B. Providing mouth care to a patient who is unconscious following a cerebrovascular accident
- C. Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a patient with hypotension
- D. Providing discharge teaching to a postsurgical patient about the rationale for a course of oral antibiotics
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Although many nursing actions are independent, others are interdependent, such as carrying out prescribed treatments, administering medications and therapies, and collaborating with other health care team members to accomplish specific, expected outcomes and to monitor and manage potential complications. Irrigating a wound, administering pain medication, and administering IV fluids are interdependent nursing actions and require a physicians order. An independent nursing action occurs when the nurse assesses a patients heart rate, provides discharge education, or provides mouth care.
A nurse has been using the nursing process as a framework for planning and providing patient care. What action would the nurse do during the evaluation phase of the nursing process?
- A. Have a patient provide input on the quality of care received.
- B. Remove a patients surgical staples on the scheduled postoperative day.
- C. Provide information on a follow-up appointment for a postoperative patient.
- D. Document a patients improved air entry with incentive spirometric use.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: During the evaluation phase of the nursing process, the nurse determines the patients response to nursing interventions. An example of this is when the nurse documents whether the patients spirometry use has improved his or her condition. A patient does not do the evaluation. Removing staples and providing information on follow-up appointments are interventions, not evaluations.
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