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MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. After completing an initial assessment on a patient, the nurse has charted that his respirations are
eupneic and his pulse is 58. This type of data would be:
1. objective.
2. reflective.
3. subjective.
4. introspective.
ANS: 1
Objective data are what the health professional observes by inspecting, percussing,
palpating, and auscultating during the physical exam.
2. A patient tells the nurse that he is very nervous, that he is nauseated, and that he “feels hot.” This
type of data would be:
1. objective.
2. reflective.
3. subjective.
4. introspective.
ANS: 3
Subjective data are what the person says about himself or herself during history taking.
ANS: 1
Together with the patient’s record and laboratory studies, the objective and subjective data
form the database.
4. When listening to a patient’s breath sounds, the nurse is unsure about a sound that is heard. The
nurse should:
1. notify the patient’s physician immediately.
2. document the sound exactly as it was heard.
3. validate the data by asking a coworker to listen to the breath sounds.
4. assess again in 20 minutes to note whether the sound is still present.
ANS: 3
Validate any data that you need to make sure are accurate. If you have less experience in
an area, ask an expert to listen.
5. Novice nurses, without a background of skills and experience to draw from, are more likely to
make their decisions using:
1. intuition.
2. a set of rules.
3. articles in journals.
4. advice from supervisors.
ANS: 2
Novice nurses operate from a set of rules (such as the nursing process).
ANS: 1
Intuition is characterized by pattern recognition—expert nurses learn to attend to a pattern of
assessment data and act without consciously labeling it.
ANS: 1
The depth and breadth of expert knowledge, largely gained from opportunities to apply
theory in real situations, greatly enhances a nurse’s critical thinking ability.
ANS: 4
First-level priority problems are those that are emergent, life-threatening, and immediate
(e.g., establishing an airway, supporting breathing, maintaining circulation, and
monitoring abnormal vital signs).
ANS: 3
Second-level priority problems are those that require prompt intervention to forestall
further deterioration (e.g., mental status change, acute pain, abnormal laboratory values,
or risks to safety or security).
10. Which critical thinking skill helps the nurse to see relationships among the data?
1. Validation
2. Clustering related cues
3. Identifying gaps in data
4. Distinguishing relevant from irrelevant
ANS: 2
Clustering related cues helps the nurse to see relationships among the data.
11. The nurse knows that developing appropriate nursing interventions for a patient relies on the
appropriateness of the:
1. nursing diagnosis.
2. medical diagnosis.
3. admission diagnosis.
4. collaborative diagnosis.
ANS: 1
An accurate nursing diagnosis provides the basis for selection of nursing interventions to
achieve outcomes for which the nurse is accountable.
ANS: 4
The nursing process is a method of problem solving that includes assessment, diagnosis,
planning, implementation, and evaluation.
13. A newly admitted patient is in acute pain, has not been sleeping well lately, and is having
difficulty breathing. How should the nurse prioritize these problems?
1. Breathing, pain, sleep
2. Breathing, sleep, pain
3. Sleep, breathing, pain
4. Sleep, pain, breathing
ANS: 1
First-level priority problems are immediate priorities (remember the ABCs), followed by
second-level problems and then third-level problems.
14. Which of the following would be formulated by a nurse using diagnostic reasoning?
1. Nursing diagnosis
2. Medical diagnosis
3. Diagnostic hypothesis
4. Diagnostic assessment
ANS: 3
Diagnostic reasoning calls for the nurse to formulate a diagnostic hypothesis; the nursing
process calls for a nursing diagnosis.
ANS: 2
A dynamic nursing process, as used by a critical thinker, would include underdiagnoses,
diagnoses of actual problems, prediction of potential problems, and identification of
strengths.
16. What is the step of the nursing process that includes data collection by health history, physical
examination, and interview?
1. Planning
2. Diagnosis
3. Evaluation
4. Assessment
ANS: 4
Data collection, including performing the health history, physical examination, and interview, is
the assessment step of the nursing process.
17. Which statement illustrates the biomedical model of Western traditional views?
1. Health is viewed as the absence of disease.
2. Optimal health is viewed as high-level wellness.
3. Health and disease are considered a cyclical process.
4. The treatment of disease is nursing’s primary focus.
ANS: 1
The biomedical model of Western tradition views health as the absence of disease.
ANS: 1
The accurate diagnosis and treatment of illness are important parts of health care, but the
public’s concept of health has expanded since the 1950s. We have an increasing interest in
lifestyle, personal habits, exercise and nutrition, and the social and natural environment.
ANS: 3
A natural progression to prevention now rounds out our concept of health. Guidelines to
prevention place emphasis on the link between health and personal behavior.
ANS: 3
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Nursing diagnoses are used to evaluate the response of the whole person to actual or
potential health problems.
ANS: 4
Objective data are the patient’s record, laboratory studies, and information that the health
professional observes by inspecting, percussing, palpating, and auscultating during the
physical examination.
22. A visiting nurse is making an initial home visit for a patient who has many chronic medical
problems. Which type of database is most appropriate to collect in this setting?
1. A follow-up database to evaluate changes at appropriate intervals
2. An episodic database because of the continuing, complex medical problems of
this patient
3. A complete health database because of the nurse’s primary responsibility for
monitoring the patient’s health
4. An emergency database because of the need to rapidly collect information and
make accurate diagnoses
ANS: 3
The complete database is collected in a primary care setting, such as a pediatric or family
practice clinic, independent or group private practice, college health service, women’s
health care agency, visiting nurse agency, or community health agency. In these settings the
nurse is the first health professional to see the patient and has primary responsibility for
monitoring the person’s health care.
ANS: 4
In an episodic or problem-centered database, the nurse collects a “mini” database, smaller
in scope than the completed database. It concerns mainly one problem, one cue complex, or
one body system.
24. A patient is at the clinic to have her blood pressure checked. She has been coming to the clinic
weekly since she changed medications 2 months ago. The nurse should:
1. collect a follow-up database and then check her blood pressure.
2. ask her to read her health record and indicate any changes since her last visit.
3. check only her blood pressure because her complete health history was
documented 2 months ago.
4. obtain a complete health history before checking her blood pressure because
much of her history information may have changed.
ANS: 1
A follow-up database is used in all settings to follow up short-term or chronic health
problems.
25. A patient is brought by ambulance to the emergency department with multiple traumas received
in an automobile accident. He is alert and cooperative, but his injuries are quite severe. How
would the nurse proceed with the data collection?
1. Collect history information first, then perform the physical examination and
institute life-saving measures.
2. Simultaneously ask history questions while performing the examination and
initiating life-saving measures.
3. Collect all information on the history form, including social support patterns,
strengths, and coping patterns.
4. Perform life-saving measures and not ask any history questions until he is
transferred to the intensive care unit.
ANS: 2
The emergency database calls for a rapid collection of the database, often compiled
concurrently with life-saving measures.
26. Which statement correctly describes the age-specific charts for the periodic health examination?
1. They are used to help identify the diagnosis of an illness.
2. They are helpful in identifying developmental delays in children.
3. They recommend that every individual receive an annual physical exam.
4. They list a frequency schedule for periodic health visits for a specific age group.
ANS: 4
The age-specific charts for the periodic health examination define a lifetime schedule of
health care, organized into packages for eight specific age groups.
27. A 42-year-old Asian patient is being seen at the clinic for an initial examination. The nurse
knows that it is important to include cultural information in his health assessment to:
1. identify the cause of his illness.
2. make accurate disease diagnoses.
3. provide cultural health rights for the individual.
4. provide culturally sensitive and appropriate care.
ANS: 4
The inclusion of cultural considerations in health assessment is of paramount importance
to gathering data that are accurate and meaningful and to intervening with culturally
sensitive and appropriate care.
28. In the health promotion model, the focus of the health professional includes:
1. changing the patient’s perceptions of disease.
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2. identification of biomedical model interventions.
3. identifying negative health acts of the consumer.
4. helping the consumer choose a healthier lifestyle.
ANS: 4
In the health promotion model, the focus of the health professional is on helping the
consumer choose a healthier lifestyle.
ANS: 3
Holistic health views the mind, body, and spirit as functioning as a whole within the
environment. A holistic model includes the patient’s perception of his or her health status,
not the nurse’s perception or goals.
30. When nursing diagnoses are being classified, which of the following would be considered a risk
diagnosis?
1. Identifying existing levels of wellness
2. Evaluating previous problems and goals
3. Identifying potential problems the individual may develop
4. Focusing on strengths and reflecting an individual’s transition to higher levels of
wellness
ANS: 3
Risk diagnoses are potential problems that an individual does not currently have but is
particularly vulnerable to develop.
31. The nurse has implemented several planned interventions to address the nursing diagnosis of
acute pain. Which would be the next appropriate action?
1. Establish priorities.
2. Identify expected outcomes.
3. Evaluate the individual’s condition and compare actual outcomes with expected
outcomes.
4. Interpret data and then identify clusters of cues and make inferences.
ANS: 3
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Evaluation is the next step after the implementation phase of the nursing process.
During this step, the nurse should evaluate the individual’s condition and compare actual
outcomes with expected outcomes.
ANS: 4
The proficient nurse, with more time and experience than the novice nurse, is able to
understand a patient situation as a whole rather than a list of tasks and is able to see how
today’s nursing actions apply to the point the nurse wants the patient to reach at a future
time.
MATCHING