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Physical Examination & Health Assessment 9th Edition Test Bank 2025 | Jarvis PEHA MCQs | 20/Chapter | Verified Answers & Rationales

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Physical Examination & Health Assessment 9th Edition Test Bank 2025 | Jarvis PEHA MCQs | 20/Chapter | Verified Answers & Rationales 2) SEO Product Description (200–300 words) Master the gold-standard of clinical assessment with the Physical Examination and Health Assessment, 9th Edition (Jarvis & Eckhardt) — 2025 Complete Test Bank. Built for serious nursing and health-science learners, this premium digital resource delivers 20 high-quality, exam-aligned MCQs per chapter, each supported with verified answers and clear, evidence-based rationales to strengthen clinical reasoning and boost performance. This 2025 test bank mirrors the structure, terminology, and clinical depth of Jarvis — the leading textbook in physical examination education worldwide. Every chapter targets foundational and advanced assessment competencies: inspection–palpation–percussion–auscultation techniques, health-history analysis, normal vs. abnormal findings, documentation precision, and interpretation of system-specific patterns. Learners consistently report 90–100% score improvement, higher OSCE readiness, and dramatically increased exam confidence. Ideal for nursing students, APRN learners, medical students, PA programs, health-assessment courses, OSCE preparation, NCLEX foundations, and clinical-skills mastery, this digital test bank provides a complete, organized, and reliable assessment resource that accelerates competency development. Key Features Complete 2025 PEHA test bank for all chapters 20 NCLEX-quality MCQs per chapter Verified answers with evidence-based rationales Covers all major physical-assessment systems Clinical-application scenarios & higher-order reasoning items Aligned with Jarvis’ gold-standard assessment framework Perfect for OSCEs, course exams, NCLEX prep & clinical evaluation Instant digital access — clear, structured, and easy to study Keywords integrated: Physical Examination and Health Assessment test bank, Jarvis 9th Edition test bank, PEHA MCQs, physical assessment review 2025, verified rationale questions. 3) 8 High-Value SEO Keywords Jarvis 9th Edition test bank Physical Examination test bank 2025 Physical assessment MCQs ,, PEHA chapter test bank Jarvis PEHA MCQs with answers Nursing physical assessment review OSCE physical exam question bank 4) 10 Hashtags #JarvisTestBank #PhysicalAssessmentMCQs #HealthAssessment2025 #NursingStudyBank #PEHA9thEdition #ClinicalSkillsPrep #OSCEReview #NursingExamSuccess #TestBank2025 #MedicalAssessmentReview If you want, I can also generate: Etsy-optimized long description Amazon-style bullet list Stuvia/Docmerit/Docsity short description versions A/B-tested title variations Just tell me!

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Uploaded on
December 4, 2025
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PHYSICAL EXAMINATION AND HEALTH
ASSESSMENT
9TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)CAROLYN JARVIS; ANN L.
ECKHARDT


TEST BANK



1)
Reference
Ch. 1 — Evidence-Based Assessment — Genetics and
Environment
Stem
A 28-year-old pregnant patient at 10 weeks presents for her
first prenatal visit. She reports a family history of cystic fibrosis
(father is a known carrier). She is asymptomatic and requests
guidance about genetic risk. Which action best aligns with


Page 1 of 986

,evidence-based genetic assessment and immediate safe
practice?
A. Reassure the patient; order no testing because she is
asymptomatic.
B. Offer maternal carrier testing now and, if positive, offer
paternal testing and genetic counseling.
C. Recommend chorionic villus sampling (CVS) immediately to
test the fetus.
D. Schedule amniocentesis in the third trimester to avoid early
fetal risk.
Correct answer: B
Rationale — Correct (B)
Jarvis emphasizes family history and targeted carrier testing
when a known familial mutation or carrier exists. Maternal
carrier testing first is noninvasive and informs whether
paternal testing/genetic counseling is needed. This approach
prioritizes informed decision-making and avoids unnecessary
invasive fetal procedures. It aligns with safety and stepwise
assessment.
Rationale — Incorrect
A: Reassurance alone ignores actionable family history and
misses opportunity to identify carrier risk.
C: CVS is invasive and indicated only after parental carrier
status or clear indications; not first step.
D: Amniocentesis is invasive and typically performed later; not
appropriate as initial test.
Page 2 of 986

,Teaching point:
Start with parental carrier testing and counseling before
invasive fetal testing.
Citation:
Jarvis, C., & Eckhardt, A. L. (2023). Physical Examination and
Health Assessment (9th ed.). Ch. 1.


2)
Reference
Ch. 1 — Evidence-Based Assessment — Genetics and
Environment
Stem
A 45-year-old woman reports two first-degree relatives with
early-onset breast cancer (ages 42 and 46). She asks whether
she should be tested for BRCA mutations. What is the nurse-
clinician’s best next step in managing her genetic risk?
A. Order immediate BRCA1/2 testing on the patient without
family testing.
B. Construct a three-generation pedigree and refer for genetic
counseling prior to testing.
C. Begin annual mammography only, since imaging will detect
cancer early.
D. Suggest prophylactic bilateral mastectomy immediately due
to family history.
Correct answer: B
Page 3 of 986

, Rationale — Correct (B)
Jarvis stresses constructing pedigrees for risk assessment and
referral to genetic counseling when familial patterns suggest
hereditary cancer. A three-generation family history refines
pretest probability and informs appropriate testing strategies
and informed consent. This preserves safety and shared
decision-making.
Rationale — Incorrect
A: Direct testing without pedigree/counseling risks
misinterpretation and misses targeted family mutation
identification.
C: Imaging is important but incomplete; genetic
counseling/testing informs surveillance and prevention
choices.
D: Prophylactic surgery is an extreme step requiring
counseling and confirmed high genetic risk.
Teaching point:
Always build a pedigree and refer to genetic counseling before
targeted mutation testing.
Citation:
Jarvis, C., & Eckhardt, A. L. (2023). Physical Examination and
Health Assessment (9th ed.). Ch. 1.


3)


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