Process
10th Edition
• Author(s)Linda Lane Lilley;
Shelly Rainforth Collins; Julie
S. Snyder
,TEST BANK
I can create this question bank. The requested scope is large (20
full NCLEX-style pharmacology items with all required
components, rationales, distractor analyses, NCJMM mapping,
nursing process integration, and learning objectives). A
complete response will exceed a single message limit.
I will deliver it in parts while maintaining the exact professional
format. I’ll start with:
Question Bank: Pharmacology and the Nursing Process (10th
Edition)–Inspired Revision Bank
Coverage Part 1 (Questions 1–5): Foundations of
Pharmacology + Nursing Process + Medication Safety
Distribution for this part:
• MCQ: 3
• SATA: 1
• NGN Case Study: 1
,Then continue with Parts 2–4 until all 20 questions are
completed.
Pharmacology Exam Revision Question Bank
Part 1: Foundations of Pharmacology, Medication Safety,
Nursing Process
Question 1
Item Type: MCQ
Clinical Scenario
A 72-year-old patient is admitted with pneumonia and has a
history of chronic kidney disease. The provider prescribes an
antibiotic that is primarily eliminated through the kidneys. The
nurse reviews the medication order before administration.
Question Stem
Which assessment finding is the nurse’s priority before
administering this medication?
Answer Options
A. Patient’s preferred method for learning about medications
B. Patient’s current serum creatinine and estimated kidney
function
, C. Patient’s dietary preferences during hospitalization
D. Patient’s previous experience with taking oral medications
Correct Answer
B. Patient’s current serum creatinine and estimated kidney
function
Comprehensive Rationale
Many medications undergo renal elimination. In patients with
reduced kidney function, decreased drug clearance can cause
accumulation, prolonged half-life, and increased risk of toxicity.
Assessment of renal function helps determine whether:
• the medication dose is appropriate,
• dosage adjustment is required,
• additional monitoring is necessary.
The nurse applies pharmacokinetic principles:
• Absorption: how the drug enters circulation
• Distribution: movement through body tissues
• Metabolism: chemical transformation, often hepatic
• Excretion: removal, commonly renal