Questions
NR 224: Final Exam 2026 Latest Update Questions and Correct Rated A+100%.
100% Verified Solutions | Updated Per Latest Nursing Guidelines | Graded A+
This comprehensive study set is designed for nursing students preparing for the NR 224
Fundamentals of Nursing final examination. It encompasses 100 meticulously verified questions
spanning five critical domains of foundational nursing practice. Each question includes a
detailed rationale, distractor analysis, nursing reference, and memory aid to maximize
comprehension and retention. Aligned with the 2026/2027 nursing curriculum guidelines, this
resource supports evidence-based learning and clinical reasoning development.
Key Features
✓ Fundamentals of patient care and therapeutic communication
✓ Health assessment techniques and physical examination
✓ Infection control & safety protocols
✓ Vital signs & clinical reasoning
✓ Evidence-based nursing interventions
Updates for 2026
1. Revised vital sign monitoring protocols with new age-specific parameters
2. Updated fall prevention and patient safety guidelines per AHRQ
3. New standards for culturally competent care and health equity
Abstract
Foundational nursing competencies form the cornerstone of professional practice, encompassing
the systematic application of the nursing process, evidence-based clinical decision-making, and
patient-centered care delivery. This study set addresses the essential knowledge domains required
for NR 224 examination success, including professional nursing foundations, health assessment
techniques, infection control principles, basic patient care procedures, and clinical reasoning
frameworks. Through 100 rigorously validated questions with comprehensive rationales and
distractor analyses, this resource promotes deep understanding of fundamental nursing concepts
while developing the critical thinking skills essential for safe, effective clinical practice and
NCLEX preparation.
Keywords
NR 224, Fundamentals of Nursing, Patient Care, Health Assessment, Clinical Reasoning,
NCLEX prep, Evidence-Based Practice, Infection Control, Vital Signs, Patient Safety
Answer Format
Each question in this study set follows a standardized format: the question stem is presented in
bold black text, followed by four answer options (A, B, C, D) in black text. The correct answer is
displayed in bold for immediate visual identification. A detailed rationale in italicized Deep Teal
explains the correct answer. "Why Wrong" sections analyze each distractor. Nursing references
cite authoritative textbook sources, and memory aids provide mnemonic devices for enhanced
retention.
Examination Overview
, Content Area Questions Key Topics Weight
Foundations of Q1–Q20 Nursing Process, 20%
Professional Nursing Ethics,
Documentation
Health Assessment & Q21–Q40 Vital Signs, Physical 20%
Vital Signs Assessment, Pain
Safety, Infection Q41–Q60 Hand Hygiene, PPE, 20%
Control & Asepsis Standard Precautions
Basic Patient Care & Q61–Q80 Hygiene, Mobility, 20%
Hygiene Nutrition,
Elimination
Clinical Reasoning & Q81–Q100 Critical Thinking, 20%
EBP NCLEX Strategies,
Research
Examination Questions
Domain 1: Foundations of Professional Nursing (Q1–Q20)
Q1: The nursing process consists of which five sequential steps?
A. Assessment, Diagnosis, Planning, Implementation, Evaluation
B. Assessment, Planning, Diagnosis, Intervention, Evaluation
C. Observation, Diagnosis, Planning, Treatment, Follow-up
D. Assessment, Analysis, Goal-setting, Action, Review
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The nursing process is a systematic five-step framework: Assessment (data
collection), Diagnosis (identifying patient problems), Planning (setting goals and interventions),
Implementation (carrying out interventions), and Evaluation (determining outcome
achievement). This framework guides clinical judgment and ensures individualized patient care.
Why Wrong: B reverses diagnosis and planning sequence; C uses medical terminology not
consistent with nursing process; D uses non-standard terms that don't reflect ANA-recognized
steps.
Nursing Reference: Potter & Perry, Fundamentals of Nursing, 2026, Chapter 15, p. 342
🧠 Memory Aid: ADPIE - A Delicious Pie Is Eaten = Assessment, Diagnosis, Planning,
Implementation, Evaluation
Q2: Which ethical principle requires the nurse to do good and promote patient well-
being?
A. Autonomy
B. Beneficence
C. Nonmaleficence
D. Justice
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Beneficence is the ethical principle that obligates healthcare providers to do good,
promote patient welfare, and act in the patient's best interest. It goes beyond nonmaleficence by
requiring positive actions to benefit patients, such as providing comfort measures and
advocating for appropriate treatment.
,Why Wrong: A (autonomy) respects patient self-determination; C (nonmaleficence) means do no
harm; D (justice) ensures fair and equal treatment distribution.
Nursing Reference: Taylor et al., Fundamentals of Nursing, 2026, Chapter 7, p. 156
🧠 Memory Aid: Beneficence = Benefit - doing good for the patient
Q3: A nurse witnesses a colleague making a medication error and failing to report
it. The nurse's obligation to report is based on which ethical principle?
A. Fidelity
B. Veracity
C. Nonmaleficence
D. Autonomy
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The obligation to report the error is primarily based on nonmaleficence (do no
harm), as unreported medication errors can cause patient harm. Reporting ensures the patient
receives appropriate monitoring and intervention, and the colleague receives remediation to
prevent future errors.
Why Wrong: A (fidelity) is keeping promises; B (veracity) is truth-telling; D (autonomy) is self-
determination. While veracity is relevant, the primary duty is preventing harm.
Nursing Reference: Potter & Perry, Fundamentals of Nursing, 2026, Chapter 7, p. 162
🧠 Memory Aid: Nonmaleficence = No Harm - reporting errors prevents future harm
Q4: The primary purpose of documentation in nursing practice is to:
A. Protect the nurse from legal liability
B. Facilitate communication among healthcare team members
C. Satisfy accreditation requirements
D. Justify billing and reimbursement
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The primary purpose of nursing documentation is to facilitate communication
among the interdisciplinary healthcare team, ensuring continuity and quality of patient care.
While documentation also serves legal, accreditation, and billing purposes, communication and
care continuity are the foundational reasons for accurate and timely documentation.
Why Wrong: A (legal protection) is a secondary benefit; C (accreditation) and D (billing) are
administrative purposes, not the primary clinical purpose.
Nursing Reference: Potter & Perry, Fundamentals of Nursing, 2026, Chapter 17, p. 388
🧠 Memory Aid: Document to Communicate - if it wasn't documented, it wasn't communicated
Q5: Which of the following is a NANDA-I nursing diagnosis?
A. Acute Myocardial Infarction
B. Impaired Physical Mobility
C. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
D. Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Impaired Physical Mobility is a NANDA-I nursing diagnosis that describes a human
response to health conditions. Nursing diagnoses focus on patient responses, not medical
diseases. NANDA-I diagnoses are standardized labels that guide nursing interventions and
outcomes.
Why Wrong: A, C, and D are all medical diagnoses made by physicians, not nursing diagnoses.
They describe diseases, not human responses to illness.
, Nursing Reference: Taylor et al., Fundamentals of Nursing, 2026, Chapter 15, p. 350
🧠 Memory Aid: Nursing Diagnosis = Patient Response (not the disease itself)
Q6: A patient tells the nurse, "I don't want to take my medication." The nurse
respects the patient's decision. This demonstrates which ethical principle?
A. Beneficence
B. Autonomy
C. Justice
D. Fidelity
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Autonomy is the ethical principle that respects the patient's right to self-
determination and to make decisions about their own healthcare, including the right to refuse
treatment. By respecting the patient's decision to decline medication, the nurse upholds
autonomy while ensuring the patient is informed of the consequences.
Why Wrong: A (beneficence) would involve persuading the patient for their benefit; C (justice)
relates to fair distribution of resources; D (fidelity) involves keeping promises and being faithful.
Nursing Reference: Potter & Perry, Fundamentals of Nursing, 2026, Chapter 7, p. 155
🧠 Memory Aid: Autonomy = Auto (Self) + Nomos (Rule) - the patient rules themselves
Q7: The SBAR communication tool stands for:
A. Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation
B. Subjective, Background, Action, Response
C. Situation, Baseline, Assessment, Review
D. Summary, Background, Analysis, Recommendation
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: SBAR stands for Situation, Background, Assessment, and Recommendation. It is a
standardized communication framework used to convey critical patient information between
healthcare providers, particularly during handoffs and when escalating concerns. SBAR
improves communication clarity, reduces errors, and promotes patient safety.
Why Wrong: B, C, and D use incorrect terms that do not match the established SBAR mnemonic
or its evidence-based framework.
Nursing Reference: Potter & Perry, Fundamentals of Nursing, 2026, Chapter 18, p. 410
🧠 Memory Aid: SBAR = Situation right now, Background story, Assessment of what I think,
Recommendation of what to do
Q8: Which type of nursing intervention is "teaching a patient about their new
medication"?
A. Independent
B. Dependent
C. Interdependent
D. Collaborative
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Patient teaching is an independent nursing intervention that does not require a
physician's order. Nurses are professionally accountable for providing patient education as
part of their scope of practice. Independent interventions are actions that nurses initiate based
on their knowledge, skills, and professional judgment.
Why Wrong: B (dependent) requires a physician order; C (interdependent) requires collaboration
with other providers; D (collaborative) involves joint decision-making with the healthcare team.