You are caring for a 50-year-old man diagnosed with multiple myeloma; he has just been told by the care team that his prognosis is poor. He is tearful and trying to express his feelings, but he is having difficulty. What should you do first?
- A. Ask if he would like you to sit with him while he collects his thoughts.
- B. Tell him that you will leave for now but will be back shortly.
- C. Offer to call pastoral care or a member of his chosen clergy.
- D. Reassure him that you can understand how he is feeling.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The most important intervention the nurse can provide is listening empathetically. Seriously ill patients and their families need time and support to cope with the changes brought about by serious illness and the prospect of impending death. The nurse who is able to listen without judging and without trying to solve the patients and familys problems provides an invaluable intervention. The patient needs to feel that people are concerned with his situation. Leaving him does not show acceptance of his feelings. Offering to call pastoral care may be helpful for some patients, but should be done after you have spent time with the patient. Telling the patient that you understand how he is feeling is inappropriate because it does not help him express his feelings.
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The nurse is caring for a patient who has terminal lung cancer and is unconscious. Which assessment finding would most clearly indicate to the nurse that the patients death is imminent?
- A. Mottling of the lower limbs
- B. Slow, steady pulse
- C. Bowel incontinence
- D. Increased swallowing
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The time of death is generally preceded by a period of gradual diminishment of bodily functions in which increasing intervals between respirations, weakened and irregular pulse, and skin color changes or mottling may be observed. The patient will not be able to swallow secretions, so suctioning, frequent and gentle mouth care, and, possibly, the administration of a transdermal anticholinergic drug. Bowel incontinence may or may not occur.
One of the functions of nursing care of the terminally ill is to support the patient and his or her family as they come to terms with the diagnosis and progression of the disease process. How should nurses support patients and their families during this process? Select all that apply.
- A. Describe their personal experiences in dealing with end-of-life issues.
- B. Encourage the patient and family to keep fighting as a cure may come.
- C. Try to appreciate and understand the illness from the patients perspective.
- D. Assist patients with performing a life review.
- E. Provide interventions that facilitate end-of-life closure.
Correct Answer: C,D,E
Rationale: Nurses are responsible for educating patients about their illness and for supporting them as they adapt to life with the illness. Nurses can assist patients and families with life review, values clarification, treatment decision making, and end-of-life closure. The only way to do this effectively is to try to appreciate and understand the illness from the patients perspective. The nurses personal experiences should not normally be included and a cure is often not a realistic hope.
The nurse is caring for a patient who has been recently diagnosed with late stage pancreatic cancer. The patient refuses to accept the diagnosis and refuses to adhere to treatment. What is the most likely psychosocial purpose of this patients strategy?
- A. The patient may be trying to protect loved ones from the emotional effects of the illness.
- B. The patient is being noncompliant in order to assert power over caregivers.
- C. The patient may be skeptical of the benefits of the Western biomedical model of health.
- D. The patient thinks that treatment does not provide him comfort.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Patients who are characterized as being in denial may be using this strategy to preserve important interpersonal relationships, to protect others from the emotional effects of their illness, and to protect themselves because of fears of abandonment. Each of the other listed options is plausible, but less likely.
A patient has just died following urosepsis that progressed to septic shock. The patients spouse says, I knew this was coming, but I feel so numb and hollow inside. The nurse should know that these statements are characteristic of what?
- A. Complicated grief and mourning
- B. Uncomplicated grief and mourning
- C. Depression stage of dying
- D. Acceptance stage of dying
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Uncomplicated grief and mourning are characterized by emotional feelings of sadness, anger, guilt, and numbness; physical sensations, such as hollowness in the stomach and tightness in the chest, weakness, and lack of energy; cognitions that include preoccupation with the loss and a sense of the deceased as still present; and behaviors such as crying, visiting places that are reminders of the deceased, social withdrawal, and restless overactivity. Complicated grief and mourning occur at a prolonged time after the death. The spouses statement does not clearly suggest depression or acceptance.
A 67-year-old woman experienced the death of her husband from a sudden myocardial infarction 5 weeks ago. The nurse recognizes that the woman will be going through the process of mourning for an extended period of time. What processes of mourning will allow the woman to accommodate the loss in a healthy way? Select all that apply.
- A. Reiterating her anger at her husbands care team
- B. Reinvesting in new relationships at the appropriate time
- C. Reminiscing about the relationship she had with her husband
- D. Relinquishing old attachments to her husband at the appropriate time
- E. Renewing her lifelong commitment to her husband
Correct Answer: B,C,D
Rationale: Six key processes of mourning allow people to accommodate to the loss in a healthy way: 1.) Recognition of the loss 2.) Reaction to the separation, and experiencing and expressing the pain of the loss 3.) Recollection and re-experiencing the deceased, the relationship, and the associated feelings 4.) Relinquishing old attachments to the deceased 5.) Readjustment to adapt to the new world without forgetting the old 6.) Reinvestment Reiterating her anger and renewing her lifelong commitment may be counterproductive to the mourning process.
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