Professional Nursing Practice
Academic Year 2026/2027
75 Questions | Graded A+ | 100% Verified
Instructions:
1. This examination consists of 75 multiple-choice questions covering 10 professional nursing domains.
2. Each question has four options (A, B, C, D). Select the BEST answer for each question.
3. Correct answers appear in bold cyan with clinical/professional rationales provided.
4. Rationales reference AACN Essentials, QSEN competencies, and evidence-based nursing standards.
5. Total time: 120 minutes. Passing score: 75% (56/75 correct).
Score Summary
Domain Questions Points Total
I. Nursing Theory & Conceptual Frameworks 1-8 1 8
II. Evidence-Based Practice & Research Utilization 9 - 16 1 8
III. Quality Improvement & Patient Safety 17 - 24 1 8
IV. Leadership & Management Principles 25 - 32 1 8
V. Ethical/Legal Standards in Nursing 33 - 40 1 8
VI. Interprofessional Collaboration 41 - 48 1 8
VII. Healthcare Policy & Systems 49 - 56 1 8
VIII. Professional Role Development 57 - 64 1 8
IX. Communication & Teamwork 65 - 70 1 6
X. Cultural Competence & Health Equity 71 - 75 1 5
TOTAL 75 - 75
1
,SECTION I: NURSING THEORY & CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORKS
1. According to Florence Nightingale's Environmental Theory, which intervention is MOST aligned with the
core principle of manipulating the patient's environment to promote healing?
A. Administering pain medication every 4 hours as B. Ensuring adequate ventilation, clean water,
prescribed proper sanitation, and noise reduction
C. Encouraging the patient to discuss their feelings D. Developing an individualized nursing care plan
about the illness based on patient goals
Rationale: Nightingale's Environmental Theory identifies five environmental components essential to healing: pure fresh
air, pure water, efficient drainage, cleanliness, and light. Manipulating these environmental factors to promote the
patient's reparative processes is the foundational tenet of her theory and remains relevant in modern infection control and
patient safety practices.
2. A nurse applies Dorothea Orem's Self-Care Deficit Theory when planning care for an older adult with
diabetes. Which nursing action reflects the concept of 'wholly compensatory nursing system'?
A. Teaching the patient how to perform blood B. Performing all self-care activities for the
glucose monitoring independently patient who is unable to do so
C. Supervising the patient while they administer their D. Collaborating with the dietitian to create a meal-
own insulin injection planning guide
Rationale: In Orem's wholly compensatory system, the nurse performs all self-care activities for the patient who is wholly
unable to meet their own self-care needs. This contrasts with partially compensatory (nurse and patient share) and
supportive-educative (patient performs with nurse guidance) systems. The wholly compensatory approach is appropriate
when the patient lacks the physical or cognitive capacity for self-care.
3. A nurse manager wants to implement a caring-based practice model on the medical-surgical unit. Which
nursing theorist's framework is MOST appropriate to guide this initiative?
A. Dorothy Johnson's Behavioral System Model B. Callista Roy's Adaptation Model
C. Jean Watson's Theory of Human Caring D. Martha Rogers' Science of Unitary Human Beings
Rationale: Jean Watson's Theory of Human Caring emphasizes the nurse-patient transpersonal caring relationship,
carative factors, and the creation of a caring-healing environment. Watson's 10 carative factors provide a practical
framework for implementing caring-based practice models. This theory aligns directly with initiatives aimed at enhancing
therapeutic relationships and holistic patient care.
4. A patient recovering from a stroke demonstrates difficulty swallowing and limited mobility on the left side.
Using Sister Callista Roy's Adaptation Model, which nursing diagnosis is BEST supported by the physiological
mode?
A. Anxiety related to role change B. Ineffective swallowing and impaired physical
mobility
C. Caregiver role strain related to new diagnosis D. Spiritual distress related to loss of independence
Rationale: Roy's Adaptation Model identifies four adaptive modes: physiological, self-concept, role function, and
interdependence. Ineffective swallowing and impaired physical mobility relate directly to the physiological mode, which
addresses the body's basic physiological needs and regulatory mechanisms. The other options address self-concept, role
function, and interdependence modes respectively.
2
, 5. Which statement BEST describes the relationship between nursing theory and evidence-based practice (EBP)?
A. Nursing theory is no longer relevant in the era of B. Nursing theory provides the conceptual
evidence-based practice foundation that guides EBP implementation
C. Evidence-based practice replaces the need for D. Nursing theory and EBP are unrelated concepts
theoretical nursing frameworks that function independently
Rationale: Nursing theory provides the conceptual and philosophical foundation that guides the systematic integration of
evidence, clinical expertise, and patient preferences in EBP. Theory identifies what concepts are important to study,
generates research questions, and provides frameworks for interpreting evidence. EBP and theory are complementary—
theory without evidence lacks empirical support, while evidence without theory lacks direction.
6. A nurse is caring for a patient with chronic heart failure using Betty Neuman's Systems Model. Which
concept from Neuman's model describes the patient's resistance to stressors?
A. Flexible line of defense B. Normal line of defense
C. Lines of resistance D. Basic structure (core)
Rationale: In Neuman's Systems Model, the lines of resistance are the internal factors that defend against stressors when
the normal line of defense is penetrated. These include immune responses, coping patterns, and physiological
compensatory mechanisms. The flexible line of defense is the outer protective buffer, the normal line of defense represents
the patient's usual wellness state, and the basic structure is the core survival resources.
7. A nurse researcher is designing a study to examine the relationship between nursing staffing ratios and patient
falls using Imogene King's Goal Attainment Theory. Which component of King's theory is MOST relevant to
this study?
A. Personal system (perception and self) B. Interpersonal system (communication and
interaction)
C. Social system (organization and authority) D. Health as a continuum of goal attainment
Rationale: King's Interpersonal System framework addresses the dynamic interaction between nurses and patients
through communication, transactions, and mutual goal-setting. When studying nursing staffing ratios (an organizational
factor within the social system) and patient falls (outcomes within the personal system), the interpersonal system provides
the theoretical lens for understanding how nurse-patient interactions and communication are affected by staffing levels.
8. Hildegard Peplau's Interpersonal Relations Theory identifies which phase as the time when the nurse and
patient work together to solve problems and achieve health goals?
A. Orientation phase B. Identification phase
C. Exploitation phase D. Resolution phase
Rationale: Peplau's Interpersonal Relations Theory describes four phases of the therapeutic nurse-patient relationship.
The exploitation phase is when the patient actively uses the services available and works with the nurse to problem-solve
and achieve goals. The orientation phase involves initial trust-building, the identification phase involves the patient
developing feelings of belonging, and the resolution phase involves terminating the relationship.
SECTION II: EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE & RESEARCH UTILIZATION
9. Which of the following represents the HIGHEST level of evidence on the evidence hierarchy?
A. Expert opinion and clinical experience B. Randomized controlled trial (RCT)
C. Systematic review and meta-analysis of RCTs D. Single descriptive qualitative study
3