Within the theory of planned behaviour, what is the term used to indicate the idea that a particular behaviour will either succeed or not?
- A. Attitude
- B. Implementation-intention
- C. Intention
- D. Perceived behavioural control
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Planned behaviour control belief sways success odds, not liking, plans, or will. Nurses tap this, a chronic confidence key.
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Which of the following is the most common assessment finding related to autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura?
- A. A reddish-purple fine petechial rash
- B. Confusion in the elderly
- C. Fever greater than 102.0 degrees F
- D. Extreme fatigue
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) trashes platelets via antibodies petechiae, tiny reddish-purple spots, bloom from capillary bleeds, the most frequent sign. Confusion, fever, or fatigue might tag along in severe cases or infection, but petechiae's visibility and link to low platelets (below 100,000) make it dominant. Nurses spot this rash, tying it to ITP's core, guiding steroids or IVIG to halt this autoimmune bleed risk.
Which atypical pneumonia can be vaccinated against?
- A. coxiella burnetii
- B. mycoplasma pneumoniae
- C. chlamydia pneumoniae
- D. legionella
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Coxiella Q fever has a vaccine, not mycoplasma, chlamydia duo, or legionella. Nurses jab this chronic farm bug shield.
The nurse receives an order to infuse heparin 1200 units/hr IV. The IV bag contains 25,000 units heparin in 500 mL D5W. Calculate the IV rate in mL/hr.
- A. 20
- B. 24
- C. 28
- D. 30
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Heparin's drip: 1200 units/hr from 25,000 units in 500 mL 500 ÷ 25,000 = 0.02 mL/unit, times 1200 = 24 mL/hr, a nurse's calc to thin blood right. Off numbers (20, 28, 30) skew dosing. Precision keeps clots at bay, a steady flow in this IV dance.
In monitoring patients who are at risk for spinal cord compression related to tumor growth, what is the most likely early manifestation?
- A. Sudden-onset back pain
- B. Motor loss
- C. Constipation
- D. Urinary hesitancy
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Spinal cord compression from tumors often starts with sudden back pain 95% of cases due to vertebral pressure or nerve irritation, an early red flag demanding urgent imaging and intervention to prevent paralysis. Motor loss, like weakness, emerges later as nerves compress further. Constipation and urinary hesitancy signal advanced autonomic involvement, not initial signs. Pain's prevalence and timing make it the nurse's focus catching it early triggers steroids or surgery, halting progression in cancer patients where spinal integrity dictates function and survival, a critical monitoring priority.
Mr XYZ, a 60-year-old, smoker with DM, hypertension and CKD Stage 3 sees you for routine chronic review. He reports recurrent gout flares past five weeks of increasing intensity and duration which he assumes is due to frequent travel and lack of exercise. His current laboratory results are creatinine 106, eGFR 56, uric acid 400, HbA1c 7.3%, random hypocount 8.5 mmol/L. He is currently taking glipizide 5 mg BD, Metformin 250 mg BD, Amlodipine 5 mg OM. What is the most appropriate management in this patient?
- A. Offer dietary advice
- B. Prescribe NSAIDs and medical certificate (MC)
- C. Increased exercise frequency (e.g. jogging at least 3 times per week)
- D. Initiate urate lowering therapy using allopurinol with colchicine prophylaxis
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Gout flares, uric acid 400, CKD 3 allopurinol with colchicine tames crystals, not just diet, NSAIDs, jogging, or smoke quit. Nurses start this chronic uric brake.