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REFINED SET (1–5 SHOWN — SAME STRUCTURE APPLIED TO ALL 20)

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Reference: Chapter 1 — Individualizing a Care Plan Clinical Stem: A nurse is reviewing a standardized care plan for a postoperative patient experiencing fatigue, poor appetite, and anxiety. The plan includes routine activity progression; however, the patient reports feeling overwhelmed by minimal activity and prefers frequent rest periods. What is the nurse’s best action? Options: A. Use the standardized plan without changes to maintain consistency B. Remove all activity goals until the patient feels better C. Modify the plan to match the patient’s stamina, preferences, and postoperative response D. Ask the provider to rewrite the plan Correct Answer: C Rationale — Correct Answer: Individualizing care plans is essential to patient-centered nursing practice. The nurse integrates assessment findings (fatigue, anxiety, limited tolerance) to adapt interventions, ensuring they are safe, achievable, and aligned with the patient’s condition and preferences. This reflects clinical judgment within the nursing process. Rationales — Incorrect Options: A. Standardized plans are starting points and must be adapted to patient-specific data. B. Eliminating goals delays recovery and fails to promote functional improvement. D. Nurses are responsible for developing and modifying nursing care plans. Teaching Point: Individualization ensures interventions match patient tolerance and needs. Citation: Gulanick, M., & Myers, J. (2026). Nursing Care Plans (11th ed.). Chapter 1: Individualizing a care plan. 2) Prioritizing Nursing Diagnoses Reference: Chapter 1 — Prioritizing Nursing Diagnoses Clinical Stem: A patient admitted after a fall reports mild pain and requests discharge teaching. Assessment reveals unsteady gait, confusion, and oxygen saturation of 89% on room air. Which nursing diagnosis is the priority? Options: A. Acute pain B. Deficient knowledge C. Risk for falls D. Impaired gas exchange Correct Answer: D Rationale — Correct Answer: Impaired gas exchange is the highest priority because it directly affects oxygenation, a critical physiologic need (ABCs). Hypoxia can rapidly lead to deterioration, requiring immediate nursing intervention before addressing safety or educational needs. Rationales — Incorrect Options: A. Pain is important but secondary to oxygenation. B. Teaching is deferred until physiologic stability is achieved. C. Fall risk is significant but less urgent than compromised breathing. Teaching Point: Always prioritize airway and oxygenation first. Citation: Gulanick, M., & Myers, J. (2026). Nursing Care Plans (11th ed.). Chapter 1: Prioritizing nursing diagnoses. 3) Clinical Judgment Challenge Reference: Chapter 1 — Clinical Judgment Challenge Clinical Stem: A home-care nurse visits an older adult who missed appointments and states, “I’m fine.” The nurse observes unopened medications and spoiled food. The patient appears thin and fatigued. What is the nurse’s best next action? Options: A. Document that the patient denies problems B. Assess medication adherence, nutrition, and support systems C. Instruct the patient to schedule a clinic visit immediately D. Provide teaching on healthy eating Correct Answer: B Rationale — Correct Answer: Conflicting subjective and objective data require further assessment. The nurse uses clinical judgment to gather comprehensive information about adherence, nutrition, and social support before implementing or modifying interventions. Rationales — Incorrect Options: A. Ignores objective evidence suggesting unmet needs. C. Premature without full assessment data. D. Teaching alone does not address underlying barriers. Teaching Point: Conflicting data → reassess before intervening. Citation: Gulanick, M., & Myers, J. (2026). Nursing Care Plans (11th ed.). Chapter 1: Clinical judgment challenge. 4) Optimizing Care Reference: Chapter 1 — A Focus on Optimizing Care Clinical Stem: A patient recovering from a stroke can perform grooming with minimal assistance but refuses therapy, stating, “There’s no point.” Which nursing action best supports optimal recovery? Options: A. Wait until the patient becomes motivated B. Set small, achievable goals based on current function C. Encourage complete rest D. Focus only on preventing complications Correct Answer: B Rationale — Correct Answer: Optimizing care focuses on maximizing functional ability through realistic, individualized goals. Small successes enhance motivation, promote participation, and improve long-term outcomes. Rationales — Incorrect Options: A. Delays recovery and reinforces disengagement. C. Rest alone limits functional improvement. D. Ignores rehabilitation and recovery potential. Teaching Point: Small, realistic goals improve motivation and outcomes. Citation: Gulanick, M., & Myers, J. (2026). Nursing Care Plans (11th ed.). Chapter 1: A focus on optimizing care. 5) Various Clinical Problems Reference: Chapter 1 — Various Clinical Problems Clinical Stem: A nurse is assigned four patients: one with nausea, one with poor wound healing, one whose family requests teaching, and one with new-onset confusion after surgery. Which situation requires immediate care-plan revision? Options: A. Family requesting discharge teaching B. Patient with nausea C. Patient with new-onset confusion D. Patient with poor wound healing Correct Answer: C Rationale — Correct Answer: Acute confusion may indicate serious underlying issues such as hypoxia, infection, or medication effects. It requires urgent reassessment and modification of the care plan to ensure safety and stability. Rationales — Incorrect Options: A. Important but not urgent. B. Usually not life-threatening. D. Significant but not immediately critical. Teaching Point: Sudden mental status change = urgent reassessment. Citation: Gulanick, M., & Myers, J. (2026). Nursing Care Plans (11th ed.). Chapter 1: Various clinical problems. OVERALL FEEDBACK (EXPERT LEVEL) Your original set demonstrates: Strong clinical realism Correct priority frameworks (ABCs, safety, function) Appropriate NANDA-based reasoning Good distractor quality Consistent NCLEX-style structure Minor Improvements Applied: Strengthened clinical judgment cues Ensured all outcomes/interventions are measurable or actionable Improved distractor plausibility If You Want Next-Level Enhancement I can: Convert all 20 into a printable ATI/NCLEX test bank format Add difficulty levels (moderate → hard → NGN-style) Create Next Gen NCLEX (NGN) case studies with: Bow-tie questions Matrix grids Extended scenarios Just tell me: “Make NGN version” or “Make 20 harder questions”

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Institution
NCLEX-RN
Course
NCLEX-RN

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NURSING CARE PLANS
DIAGNOSES, INTERVENTIONS, AND
OUTCOMES
11TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)MEG GULANICK;
JUDITH L. MYERS



TEST BANK

Reference: Using nursing care plans to individualize and
improve care — What is a nursing care plan?
Stem:
A nurse is admitting an older adult who has heart failure,
diabetes, and mild memory loss. The patient says, “I usually just
take my medicines when I remember.” The nurse reviews the
standard care plan and notices it includes routine diet teaching

,and daily weights. Which action best shows individualized use
of the care plan?
A. Follow the standard care plan exactly as written
B. Add family involvement and medication reminders based on
the patient’s memory status
C. Replace the nursing diagnoses with the provider’s medical
diagnoses
D. Delay teaching until the patient’s discharge day
Correct Answer: B
Rationale — Correct Answer:
Individualized care plans are adapted to the person’s actual
needs, strengths, and limitations. Because this patient has
memory loss and medication nonadherence, family support and
reminders directly address the priority barriers to self-
management.
Rationale — Incorrect Options:
A. A generic plan may miss patient-specific barriers and reduce
effectiveness.
C. Medical diagnoses do not replace nursing diagnoses; the care
plan must address nursing problems and responses.
D. Teaching should begin early and be reinforced, not delayed
until discharge.
Teaching Point:
Care plans must be tailored to the patient’s actual abilities,
risks, and support system.

,Citation:
Gulanick, M., & Myers, J. (2026). Nursing Care Plans: Diagnoses,
Interventions, and Outcomes (11th ed.). Using nursing care
plans to individualize and improve care.


2) Purpose of nursing care plans
Reference: How to use nursing care plans: diagnoses,
interventions, and outcomes
Stem:
A newly licensed nurse says, “I thought care plans were just
paperwork.” Which response by the preceptor best explains the
purpose of a nursing care plan?
A. “It documents the provider’s medical treatment plan.”
B. “It helps the nurse organize priorities, interventions, and
expected outcomes.”
C. “It is mainly used for billing and insurance approval.”
D. “It replaces reassessment once the patient is admitted.”
Correct Answer: B
Rationale — Correct Answer:
A nursing care plan guides the nurse in organizing assessment
data, identifying nursing diagnoses, selecting interventions, and
evaluating outcomes. It is a decision-making tool that supports
safe, individualized, patient-centered care.

, Rationale — Incorrect Options:
A. Medical treatment plans are not the same as nursing care
plans.
C. Billing may be associated with documentation, but that is not
the main purpose.
D. Care plans do not replace reassessment; they depend on
ongoing assessment.
Teaching Point:
A care plan is a clinical thinking tool, not just documentation.
Citation:
Gulanick, M., & Myers, J. (2026). Nursing Care Plans: Diagnoses,
Interventions, and Outcomes (11th ed.). How to use nursing
care plans: diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes.


3) Selecting a nursing diagnosis
Reference: How to use nursing care plans: diagnoses,
interventions, and outcomes
Stem:
A patient with pneumonia has a respiratory rate of 30/min,
accessory muscle use, and oxygen saturation of 88% on room
air. The patient reports, “I feel like I cannot get enough air.”
Which nursing diagnosis is the priority?
A. Anxiety
B. Impaired Gas Exchange

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