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Exam (elaborations)

Test Bank For Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 3rd Edition by Linda Lane Lilley

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Test Bank For Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 3rd Edition by Linda Lane Lilley, Julie S. Snyder and Shelly Rainforth Collins ISBN 9781927406687 Chapter 1-58 | Complete Guide A+. Chapter 01: Nursing Practice in Canada and Drug Therapy Lilley: Pharmacology 6 Bank Chapter 02: Pharmacological Principles Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 10 Bank Chapter 03: Legal and Ethical Considerations Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health 14 M Chapter 04: Patient Focused Considerations Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care 20 O Chapter 05: Gene Therapy and Pharmacogenomics Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health 22 Bank Chapter 06: Medication Errors: Preventing and Responding Lilley: Pharmacology for 24 M Chapter 07: Patient Education and Drug Therapy Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian 28 Bank Chapter 08: Over-the-Counter Drugs and Natural Health Products 31 O Chapter 09: Vitamins and Minerals Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care 34 Bank Chapter 10: Principles of Drug Administration Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health 41 Bank Chapter 11: Analgesic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 46 M Chapter 12: General and Local Anaesthetics Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health 50 Bank Chapter 13: Central Nervous System Depressants and Muscle Relaxants Lilley: Pharmacology 54 Bank Chapter 14: Central Nervous System Stimulants and Related Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology 58 Bank Chapter 15: Antiepileptic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 62 M Chapter 16: Antiparkinsonian Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 65 Bank Chapter 17: Psychotherapeutic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 70 Bank Chapter 18: Substance Misuse Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 74 O Chapter 19: Adrenergic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 78 Bank Chapter 20: Adrenergic-Blocking Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health 82 Bank Chapter 21: Cholinergic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 86 Bank Chapter 22: Cholinergic-Blocking Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for anadian Health 90 Bank Chapter 23: Antihypertensive Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 94 Bank Chapter 24: Antianginal Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 98 Bank Chapter 25: Heart Failure Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care 102 O Chapter 26: Antidysrhythmic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 106 Bank Chapter 27: Coagulation Modifier Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care 110 Bank Chapter 28: Antilipemic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 115 Bank Chapter 29: Diuretic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 119 Bank Chapter 30: Fluids and Electrolytes Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care 123 Bank Chapter 31: Pituitary Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 126 Bank Chapter 32: Thyroid and Antithyroid Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health 130 O Chapter 33: Antidiabetic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 135 Bank Chapter 34: Adrenal Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 138 Bank Chapter 35: Women’s Health Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian 143 Bank Chapter 36: Men’s Health Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian 147 Bank Chapter 37: Antihistamines, Decongestants, Antitussives, and Expectorants Lilley: 151 Bank Chapter 38: Respiratory Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 155 O Chapter 39: Acid-Controlling Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health 159 Bank Chapter 40: Antidiarrheal Drugs and Laxatives Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health 163 Bank Chapter 41: Antiemetic and Anti-nausea Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for 166 Bank Chapter 42: Nutritional Supplements Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 169 Bank Chapter 43: Antibiotics, Part 1: Sulfonamides, Penicillins, Cephalosporins 173 Bank Chapter 44: Antibiotics Part 2: Aminoglycosides, Fluoroquinolones, and Other 176 Bank Chapter 45: Antiviral Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 180 Bank Chapter 46: Antitubercular Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 184 Bank Chapter 47: Antifungal Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 188 Bank Chapter 48: Antimalarial, Antiprotozoal, and Anthelmintic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology 191 Bank Chapter 49: Anti-Inflammatory and Antigout Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for 195 M Chapter 50: Immunosuppressant Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 198 Bank Chapter 51: Immunizing Drugs and Pandemic Preparedness Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian 202 M Chapter 52: Antineoplastic Drugs Part 1: Cancer Overview and Cell Cycle 206 Bank Chapter 53: Antineoplastic Drugs Part 2: Cell Cycle–Nonspecific and 208 Bank Chapter 54: Biological Response–Modifying Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian 211 Bank Chapter 55: Anemia Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 215 M Chapter 56: Dermatological Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 219 Bank Chapter 57: Ophthalmic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice 222 Bank Chapter 58: Otic Drugs Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice

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Uploaded on
December 15, 2023
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Written in
2024/2025
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TEST BANK
PHARMACOLOGY FOR CANADIAN HEALTH CARE PRACTICE

LINDA LANE LILLEY, JULIE S. SNYDER AND SHELLY RAINFORTH COLLINS

3rd Edition




TEST BANK

,Chapter 01: Nursing Practice in Canada and Drug Therapy
Lilley: Pharmacology for Canadian Health Care Practice, 3rd Canadian Edition


MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. Which is a judgement about a particular patient‘s potential need or
problem?
a. A goal
b. An assessment
c. Subjective data
d. A nursing diagnosis

ANS: D
Nursing diagnosis is the phase of the nursing process during which
a clinical judgement is made about how a patient responds to heath conditions and life
processes or vulnerability forthat response.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Knowledge REF: p. 11

2. The patient is to receive oral furosemide (Lasix) every day; however, because the patient is
unable to swallow, he cannot take medication orally, as ordered. The nurse needs to contact
the physician. What type of problem is this?
a. A ―right time‖ problem
b. A ―right dose‖ problem
c. A ―right route‖ problem
d. A ―right medication‖ problem
ANS: C
This is a ―right route‖ problem: the nurse cannot assume the route and must clarify the route
with the prescriber. This is not a ―right time‖ problem because the ordered frequency has not
changed. This is not a ―right dose‖ problem because the dose is not related to an inability to
swallow. This is not a ―right medication‖ problem because the medication ordered will not
change, just the route.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: p. 14

3. The nurse has been monitoring the patient‘s progress on his new drug regimen since the first
dose and has been documenting signs of possible adverse effects. What nursing process phase
is the nurse practising?
a. Planning
b. Evaluation
c. Implementation
d. Nursing diagnosis
ANS: B
Monitoring the patient‘s progress is part of the evaluation phase. Planning, implementation,
and nursing diagnosis are not illustrated by this example.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: p. 19

,4. The nurse is caring for a patient who has been newly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Which statement best illustrates an outcome criterion for this patient?
a. The patient will follow instructions.
b. The patient will not experience complications.
c. The patient adheres to the new insulin treatment regimen.
d. The patient demonstrates safe insulin self-administration technique.
ANS: D
Having the patient demonstrate safe insulin self-administration technique is a specific and
measurable outcome criterion. Following instructions and avoiding complications are not
specific criteria. Adherence to the new insulin treatment regimen is not objective and would
be difficult to measure.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: p. 13

5. Which activity best reflects the implementation phase of the nursing process for the patient
who is newly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes mellitus?
a. Providing education regarding self-injection technique
b. Setting goals and outcome criteria with the patient‘s input
c. Recording a history of over-the-counter medications used at home
d. Formulating nursing diagnoses regarding knowledge deficits related to the new
treatment regimen
ANS: A
Education is an intervention that occurs during the implementation phase. Setting goals and
outcome criteria reflects the planning phase. Recording a drug history reflects the assessment
phase. Formulating nursing diagnoses regarding a knowledge deficit reflects analysis of data
as part of the planning phaseN.
DIF: Cognitive Level: Analysis REF: p. 8 | p. 13

6. The nurse is working during a very busy night shift, and the health care provider has just
given the nurse a medication order over the telephone, but the nurse does not recall the route.
What is the best way for the nurse to avoid medication errors?
a. Recopy the order neatly on the order sheet, with the most common route indicated
b. Consult with the pharmacist for clarification about the most common route
c. Call the health care provider to clarify the route of administration
d. Withhold the drug until the health care provider visits the patient
ANS: C
If a medication order does not include the route, the nurse must ask the health care provider to
clarify it. Never assume the route of administration.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Application | Cognitive Level: Analysis REF: p. 17

7. Which constitutes the traditional Five Rights of medication administration?
a. Right drug, right route, right dose, right time, and right patient
b. Right drug, the right effect, the right route, the right time, and the right patient
c. Right patient, right strength, right diagnosis, right drug, and right route
d. Right patient, right diagnosis, right drug, right route, and right time
ANS: A

, The traditional Five Rights of medication administration were considered to be Right drug,
Right route, Right dose, Right time, and Right patient. Right effect, right strength, and right
diagnosis are not part of the traditional Five Rights.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Comprehension REF: p. 13

8. What correctly describes the nursing process?
a. Diagnosing, planning, assessing, implementing, and finally evaluating
b. Assessing, then diagnosing, implementing, and ending with evaluating
c. A linear direction that begins with assessing and continues through diagnosing,
planning, and finally implementing
d. An ongoing process that begins with assessing and continues with diagnosing,
planning, implementing, and evaluating
ANS: D
The nursing process is an ongoing, flexible, adaptable, and adjustable five-step process that
begins with assessing and continues through diagnosing, planning, implementing, and finally
evaluating, which may then lead back to any of the other phases.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: p. 8

9. When the nurse is considering the timing of a drug dose, which is most important to assess?
a. The patient‘s identification
b. The patient‘s weight
c. The patient‘s last meal
d. Any drug or food allergies
ANS: C
The pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of the drug need to be assessed with
regard to any drug–food interactions or compatibility issues. The patient‘s identification,
weight, and drug or food allergies are not affected by the drug‘s timing.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: p. 17

10. The nurse is writing nursing diagnoses for a plan of care. Which reflects the correct format for
her nursing diagnosis?
a. Anxiety
b. Anxiety related to new drug therapy
c. Anxiety related to anxious feelings about drug therapy, as evidenced by statements
such as ―I‘m upset about having to give myself shots‖
d. Anxiety related to new drug therapy, as evidenced by statements such as ―I‘m
upset about having to give myself shots‖
ANS: D

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