100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

NURS 612 Shadow Health All Modules Cases Instructor Keys Already graded A+ | COMPLETE WITH SOLUTIONS

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
37
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
17-01-2026
Written in
2025/2026

iNURS 612 Shadow Health All Modules Cases Instructor Keys Already graded A+ | COMPLETE WITH SOLUTIONS t would heal up on its own, but now it’s looking I got this scrape on my foot a while ago, and I thought pretty nasty. And the pain is killing me! Module 1 - Health History Ms. Jones is a pleasant, 28-year-old obese African American single woman who presents to establish care and with a recent right foot injury. She is the primary source of the history. Ms. Jones offers information freely and without contradiction. Speech is clear and coherent. She maintains eye contact throughout the interview. Timeframe: 1 week after fall (Age: 28) Reason for visit: Patient presents for an initial primary care visit today complaining of an infected foot wound. Learning Objectives Develop strong communication skills • Interview the patient to elicit subjective health information about her health and health history • Ask relevant follow-up questions to evaluate patient condition • Demonstrate empathy for patient perspectives, feelings, and sociocultural background • Identify opportunities to educate the patient Document accurately and appropriately • Document subjective data using professional terminology • Organize appropriate documentation in the EHR Demonstrate clinical reasoning skills • Organize all components of an interview • Assess risk for disease, infection, injury, and complications After completing the assessment, you will reflect on personal strengths, limitations, beliefs, prejudices, and values. Module Features • Information Processing Activity • Student Performance Index - This style of rubric contains subjective and objective data categories. Subjective data categories include interview questions and patient data. Objective data categories include examination and patient data. Underlying ICD-10 Diagnoses High Priority Low Priority: • Acute pain of the foot • Acanthosis nigricans • Local infection of skin and • Asthma subcutaneous tissue of the foot • Dysmenorrhea • Uncontrolled type 2 diabetes • Hirsutism mellitus • Hypertension • Menorrhagia • Obesity • Oligomenorrhea • Polycystic ovarian syndrome History of Present Illness One week after sustaining the cut, Tina Jones develops an infection in the cut on the bottom of her foot; she seeks treatment when the infection starts to swell and produce pus. Day 1 (Onset): Tina was at home, going down the back steps, and she tripped. She turned her ankle and scraped the bottom of her foot. The wound bled, but she stopped the bleeding quickly and cleaned the wound. She worried that she had sprained her ankle, and her mom drove her to the ER. (“a week ago”) The ER did an xray (no broken bones), gave her a prescription for Tramadol, and sent her home. In the following days, her ankle seemed fine not as serious as she thought. Day 2 - 4: She cleaned the wound dutifully, twice a day, with soap and water or hydrogen peroxide, let it dry, put Neosporin on it, and bandaged it. The wound wasn’t getting worse, but it wasn’t healing, either. She expresses that she “took really good care of it.” Tina was able to go to work and attend school. Day 4: Tina went to her cousin’s house, where she encountered cats and experienced wheezing. She tried two puffs on her albuterol inhaler, and she had to do a third puff. (“three days ago”) Day 5 - 6: Tina noticed pus in the wound, and swelling, redness and a warm feeling in her foot. Her pain increased to the point she was unable to walk. She began to take the Tramadol to try to manage the pain, but it didn’t resolve the pain completely. She missed class and work. (“two days ago”) On the night of Day 6: Tina started to run a fever. They took her temperature at home, and it was 102. (“last night”) Morning of Day 7: Tina finally recognizes that her foot infection is not going to get better, and her mom takes her to the nurse practitioner to get the foot looked at. Subjective and Objective Model Documentation Printable “Answer Key” available within the Shadow Health DCE. Chief Complaint • Symptoms - Foot pain and discharge • Diagnosis - Infected foot wound Vitals • Weight (kg) - 88 • Pulse Oximetry - 99% • BMI - 30.5 • Blood Pressure (BP) - 139/87 • Heart Rate (HR) - 82 • Blood Glucose - 117 • Respiratory Rate (RR) - 16 • Temperature (F) - 98.9 Medications 1. Acetaminophen 500-1000 mg PO prn (headaches) 4. Albuterol 90 mcg/spray MDI 2 puffs Q4H prn (last 2. Ibuprofen 600 mg PO TID prn (menstrual cramps) use: “a few months ago”) 3. Tramadol 50 mg PO BID prn (foot pain) Allergies • Penicillin: rash • Denies food and latex allergies • Allergic to cats and dust. When she is exposed to allergens she states that she has runny nose, itchy and swollen eyes, and increased asthma symptoms. Abnormal Findings

Show more Read less
Institution
NURS 612: Shadow Health Case Studies
Course
NURS 612: Shadow Health Case Studies











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
NURS 612: Shadow Health Case Studies
Course
NURS 612: Shadow Health Case Studies

Document information

Uploaded on
January 17, 2026
Number of pages
37
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

lOMoAR cPSD| 60399657




ADVANCED HEALTH ASSESSMENT
Health History - TINA JONES™




NURS 612 Shadow Health All Modules Cases Instructor
i

Keys Already graded A+
t would heal up on its own, but now it’s looking I got this
scrape on my foot a while ago, and I thought pretty nasty.
And the pain is killing me!



Module 1 - Health History
Ms. Jones is a pleasant, 28-year-old obese African American single woman who presents to establish care and with a
recent right foot injury. She is the primary source of the history. Ms. Jones offers information freely and without
contradiction. Speech is clear and coherent. She maintains eye contact throughout the interview.
Timeframe: 1 week after fall (Age: 28)
Reason for visit: Patient presents for an initial primary care visit today complaining of an infected foot wound.

Learning Objectives
Develop strong communication skills
• Interview the patient to elicit subjective health information about her health and health history
• Ask relevant follow-up questions to evaluate patient condition
• Demonstrate empathy for patient perspectives, feelings, and sociocultural background
• Identify opportunities to educate the patient

Document accurately and appropriately
• Document subjective data using professional terminology
• Organize appropriate documentation in the EHR

Demonstrate clinical reasoning skills
• Organize all components of an interview
• Assess risk for disease, infection, injury, and complications

After completing the assessment, you will reflect on personal strengths, limitations, beliefs, prejudices, and values.

Module Features
• Information Processing Activity




' Shadow Healthfi 062015 || ShadowHealth.com
**For instructor use only**
Page 1 of 3

, lOMoAR cPSD| 60399657




ADVANCED HEALTH ASSESSMENT
Health History - TINA JONES™




• Student Performance Index - This style of rubric contains subjective and objective data categories. Subjective data
categories include interview questions and patient data. Objective data categories include examination
and patient data. • Uncontrolled type 2 diabetes
• Hirsutism
mellitus • Hypertension
Underlying ICD-10 Diagnoses
High Priority Low Priority: • Menorrhagia
• Obesity
• Acute pain of the foot • Acanthosis nigricans
• Oligomenorrhea
• Local infection of skin and • Asthma subcutaneous tissue of the foot
• Polycystic ovarian syndrome
• Dysmenorrhea




History of Present Illness

One week after sustaining the cut, Tina Jones develops an infection in the cut on the bottom of her foot; she seeks
treatment when the infection starts to swell and produce pus.

Day 1 (Onset): Tina was at home, going down the back steps, and she tripped. She turned her ankle and scraped the
bottom of her foot. The wound bled, but she stopped the bleeding quickly and cleaned the wound. She worried that
she had sprained her ankle, and her mom drove her to the ER. (“a week ago”)

The ER did an xray (no broken bones), gave her a prescription for Tramadol, and sent her home. In the following days,
her ankle seemed fine not as serious as she thought.
Day 2 - 4: She cleaned the wound dutifully, twice a day, with soap and water or hydrogen peroxide, let it dry, put
Neosporin on it, and bandaged it. The wound wasn’t getting worse, but it wasn’t healing, either. She expresses that
she “took really good care of it.” Tina was able to go to work and attend school.

Day 4: Tina went to her cousin’s house, where she encountered cats and experienced wheezing. She tried two puffs on
her albuterol inhaler, and she had to do a third puff. (“three days ago”)




' Shadow Healthfi 062015 || ShadowHealth.com
**For instructor use only**
Page 1 of 3

,ADVANCED HEALTH ASSESSMENT
Health History - TINA JONES™

lOMoAR cPSD| 60399657




Day 5 - 6: Tina noticed pus in the wound, and swelling, redness and a warm feeling in
her foot. Her pain increased to the point she was unable to walk. She began to take the
Tramadol to try to manage the pain, but it didn’t resolve the pain completely. She missed class and work. (“two days
ago”)

On the night of Day 6: Tina started to run a fever. They took her temperature at home, and it was 102. (“last night”)
Morning of Day 7: Tina finally recognizes that her foot infection is not going to get better, and her mom takes her to
the nurse practitioner to get the foot looked at.

Subjective and Objective Model Documentation
Printable “Answer Key” available within the Shadow Health DCE.

Chief Complaint
• Symptoms - Foot pain and discharge
• Diagnosis - Infected foot wound

Vitals
• Weight (kg) - 88 • Pulse Oximetry - 99%
• BMI - 30.5 • Blood Pressure (BP) - 139/87
• Heart Rate (HR) - 82 • Blood Glucose - 117
• Respiratory Rate (RR) - 16 • Temperature (F) - 98.9


Medications
1. Acetaminophen 500-1000 mg PO prn (headaches) 4. Albuterol 90 mcg/spray MDI 2 puffs Q4H prn (last
2. Ibuprofen 600 mg PO TID prn (menstrual cramps) use: “a few months ago”)
3. Tramadol 50 mg PO BID prn (foot pain)

Allergies
• Penicillin: rash
• Denies food and latex allergies
• Allergic to cats and dust. When she is exposed to allergens she states that she has runny nose, itchy and swollen
eyes, and increased asthma symptoms.
Abnormal Findings




' Shadow Healthfi 062015 || ShadowHealth.com
**For instructor use only**
Page 1 of 3

, ADVANCED HEALTH ASSESSMENT
Health History - TINA JONES™

lOMoAR cPSD| 60399657




Reported during Chief Complaint interview
• Reports open foot wound and throbbing pain
• Rates present pain at a 7 out of 10
• Discharge, redness, swelling, and warmth around foot
wound
• Reports a fever last night and presents with a fever of
101.1 F
• Pain affects ability to walk, job performance, and
class attendance



Reported during Past Medical History interview
• Diagnosed with asthma in childhood and uses an
inhaler 2 to 3 times per week
• Allergic to penicillin, dust and cats, which cause
wheezing
• Diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes
• Does not currently take medication for diabetes and
does not monitor blood glucose
• Heavy menstrual flow, heavy cramping, and irregular
periods
• Occasional headaches and eye strain




' Shadow Healthfi 062015 || ShadowHealth.com
**For instructor use only**
Page 1 of 3
$15.99
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
IszackBd
5.0
(1)

Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
NUR 612 EXAMS BUNDLE
-
13 2026
$ 176.87 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
IszackBd University Of Washington
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
7
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
1
Documents
2600
Last sold
2 days ago
IszackBd Stuvia

Our store offers a wide selection of materials on various subjects and difficulty levels, created by experienced teachers. We specialize on NURSING,WGU,ACLS USMLE,TNCC,PMHNP,ATI and other major courses, Updated Exam, Study Guides and Test banks. If you don't find any document you are looking for in this store contact us and we will fetch it for you in minutes, we love impressing our clients with our quality work and we are very punctual on deadlines. Please go through the sets description appropriately before any purchase and leave a review after purchasing so as to make sure our customers are 100% satisfied. FOR ANY REQUEST FEEL FREE TO REACH US

Read more Read less
5.0

1 reviews

5
1
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions