CANADIAN NURSING 4TH EDITION BY
MARGARET KEATINGS, ADAMS PAMELA
9781771721776 CHAPTER 1-12 COMPLETE
GUIDE.
Which of the following assists in protecting the patient's right to autonomy?
a. Answerability
b. Informed consent
c. Constrained moral agency
d. Maleficence - b. Informed consent
The goal of informed consent is to protect the patient's right to autonomy.
,The patient states that she needs to exercise regularly, watch her weight,
and reduce her fat intake. What does this demonstrate
about the patient?
a. She believes she will have a heart attack.
b. She values health promotion activities.
c. She believes she will not become sick.
d. She has unrealistic expectations for herself. - b. She values health
promotion activities.
A value is a strong personal belief. It is an ideal that a person or group
(such as nurses) strives to uphold. An individual's values reflect cultural,
social influences, and personal needs.
,A secondary schoolteacher with advanced multiple sclerosis teaches from her
wheelchair but insists on being treated the same as other colleagues.
Which of the following is the teacher demonstrating?
a. Preserving dignity
b. Choosing from alternatives
c. Considering all consequences
d. Acting with a pattern of consistency - a. Preserving dignity
The teacher's choice is preserving dignity, which is a value included in
the Canadian Nurses Association (CNA) Code of Ethics. She cherishes her
choice of
being treated like everyone else despite her medical condition and publicly
affirms the choice by teaching from her wheelchair and insisting that she
be
treated the same as her colleagues.
In which of the following instances does the nurse recognize that
interventions for values clarification are beneficial for the patient?
a. The patient and nurse have different beliefs.
b. The patient is experiencing a values conflict.
c. The nurse is unsure of the patient's values.
d. The patient has rejected normal values. - b. The patient is
experiencing a values conflict.
Values clarification is the process of appraising one's own personal values.
It is not a set of rules; nor does it suggest that certain values should be
accepted by all people.
A nurse is working with a patient to try to clarify the patient's values in
relation to his care. Which of the following is an example of
the type of response that the nurse should use in such a situation?
, a. "Your questions were pretty blunt."
b. "Tell me what you are thinking about."
c. "I've felt that way before; I'd be upset, too."
d. "You seem concerned about your tests. Let me explain them." - b.
"Tell me what you are thinking about."
Values clarification is the process of appraising one's own personal
values. It involves self-reflection that leads to greater self-awareness and
personal insight.
Which one of the following is an example of ethical responsibility?
a. Delivery of competent care
b. Formation of interpersonal relationships
c. Application of the nursing process
d. Evaluation of new computerized technologies - a. Delivery of competent
care
Providing competent care is one of the values in the CNA Code of Ethics
that nurses have to uphold.
A student nurse realizes that she has administered the wrong dose of
medication to a patient and immediately informs her clinical
instructor of this error. How is this student nurse best described as a
professional?
a. Confident
b. Trustworthy
c. Compliant
d. Accountable - d. Accountable