Name: ______________________ Class: _________________ Date: _________ ID: A
Critical Thinking & Ethical Decision Making Exam
____ 1. A nurse has been offered a position on an obstetric unit and has learned that the unit offers
therapeutic abortions, a procedure which contradicts the nurse's personal beliefs. What is the
nurse's ethical obligation to these patients?
A) The nurse should adhere to professional standards of practice and offer service to
these patients.
B) The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different
nursing role.
C) The nurse should decline to care for the patients considering abortion.
D) The nurse should express alternatives to women considering terminating their
pregnancy.
____ 2. A terminally ill patient you are caring for is complaining of pain. The physician has ordered a large
dose of intravenous opioids by continuous infusion. You know that one of the adverse effects of
this medicine is respiratory depression. When you assess your patient's respiratory status, you
find that the rate has decreased from 16 breaths per minute to 10 breaths per minute. What action
should you take?
A) Decrease the rate of IV infusion.
B) Stimulate the patient in order to increase respiratory rate.
C) Report the decreased respiratory rate to the physician.
D) Allow the patient to rest comfortably.
____ 3. An adult patient has requested a “do not resuscitate” (DNR) order in light of his recent diagnosis
with late stage pancreatic cancer. The patient's son and daughter-in-law are strongly opposed to the
patient's request. What is the primary responsibility of the nurse in this situation?
A) Perform a “slow code” until a decision is made.
B) Honor the request of the patient.
C) Contact a social worker or mediator to intervene.
D) Temporarily withhold nursing care until the physician talks to the family.
____ 4. An elderly patient is admitted to your unit with a diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia.
During admission the patient states, “I have a living will.” What implication of this should the
nurse recognize?
A) This document is always honored, regardless of circumstances.
B) This document specifies the patient's wishes before hospitalization.
C) This document that is binding for the duration of the patient's life.
D) This document has been drawn up by the patient's family to determine DNR
status.
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Name: ______________________ ID: A
____ 5. A nurse has been providing ethical care for many years and is aware of the need to maintain the
ethical principle of nonmaleficence. Which of the following actions would be considered a
contradiction of this principle?
A) Discussing a DNR order with a terminally ill patient
B) Assisting a semi-independent patient with ADLs
C) Refusing to administer pain medication as ordered
D) Providing more care for one patient than for another
____ 6. You have just taken report for your shift and you are doing your initial assessment of your
patients. One of your patients asks you if an error has been made in her medication. You know
that an incident report was filed yesterday after a nurse inadvertently missed a scheduled dose of
the patient's antibiotic. Which of the following principles would apply if you give an accurate
response?
A) Veracity
B) Confidentiality
C) Respect
D) Justice
____ 7. A nurse has begun creating a patient's plan of care shortly after the patient's admission. It is
important that the wording of the chosen nursing diagnoses falls within the taxonomy of nursing.
Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of a nursing diagnosis?
A) American Nurses Association (ANA)
B) NANDA
C) National League for Nursing (NLN)
D) Joint Commission
____ 8. In response to a patient's complaint of pain, the nurse administered a PRN dose of hydromorphone
(Dilaudid). In what phase of the nursing process will the nurse determine whether this medication
has had the desired effect?
A) Analysis
B) Evaluation
C) Assessment
D) Data collection
____ 9. A medical nurse has obtained a new patient's health history and completed the admission
assessment. The nurse has followed this by documenting the results and creating a care plan for the
patient. Which of the following is the most important rationale for documenting the patient's care?
A) It provides continuity of care.
B) It creates a teaching log for the family.
C) It verifies appropriate staffing levels.
D) It keeps the patient fully informed.
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Name: ______________________ ID: A
____ 10. The nurse is caring for a patient who is withdrawing from heavy alcohol use and who is
consequently combative and confused, despite the administration of benzodiazepines. The patient
has a fractured hip that he suffered in a traumatic accident and is trying to get out of bed. What is
the most appropriate action for the nurse to take?
A) Leave the patient and get help.
B) Obtain a physician's order to restrain the patient.
C) Read the facility's policy on restraints.
D) Order soft restraints from the storeroom.
____ 11. A patient admitted with right leg thrombophlebitis is to be discharged from an acute-care facility.
Following treatment with a heparin infusion, the nurse notes that the patient's leg is pain-free,
without redness or edema. Which step of the nursing process does this reflect?
A) Diagnosis
B) Analysis
C) Implementation
D) Evaluation
____ 12. During report, a nurse finds that she has been assigned to care for a patient admitted with an
opportunistic infection secondary to AIDS. The nurse informs the clinical nurse leader that she is
refusing to care for him because he has AIDS. The nurse has an obligation to this patient under
which legal premise?
A) Good Samaritan Act
B) Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC)
C) Patient Self-Determination Act
D) ANA Code of Ethics
____ 13. An emergency department nurse is caring for a 7-year-old child suspected of having meningitis. The
patient is to have a lumbar puncture performed, and the nurse is doing preprocedure teaching with
the child and the mother. The nurse's action is an example of which therapeutic communication
technique?
A) Informing
B) Suggesting
C) Expectation-setting
D) Enlightening
____ 14. The nurse, in collaboration with the patient's family, is determining priorities related to the care of
the patient. The nurse explains that it is important to consider the urgency of specific problems
when setting priorities. What provides the best framework for prioritizing patient problems?
A) Availability of hospital resources
B) Family member statements
C) Maslow's hierarchy of needs
D) The nurse's skill set
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