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Nurse’s Pocket Guide 16th Edition Nursing Test Bank 2026 | Doenges Care Plans & Nursing Diagnoses MCQs Study Guide

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Nurse’s Pocket Guide 16th Edition Nursing Test Bank 2026 | Doenges Care Plans & Nursing Diagnoses MCQs Study Guide 2) SEO Product Description (200–300 words) Master nursing diagnoses, care planning, and clinical prioritization with this comprehensive Nurse’s Pocket Guide, 16th Edition Nursing Test Bank (2026) — expertly aligned with the gold-standard text by Doenges, Moorhouse, and Murr. This digital test bank delivers FULL coverage of all chapters from Nurse’s Pocket Guide: Diagnoses, Prioritized Interventions, and Rationales, transforming complex nursing diagnoses into exam-ready, clinically relevant NCLEX-style questions. Each chapter includes 25 high-quality MCQs designed to reinforce diagnostic accuracy, intervention selection, and evidence-based rationales — exactly what nursing programs expect at both classroom and clinical levels. Built for efficiency and clarity, this resource helps nursing students save study time, strengthen clinical judgment, and improve safe patient-care decision-making across multiple nursing specialties. Every question is paired with clear, rationale-driven explanations that mirror real-world nursing documentation and care-plan reasoning. Ideal for courses that primarily use this textbook, including: Fundamentals of Nursing Nursing Diagnosis & Care Planning Adult Health / Medical-Surgical Nursing Mental Health Nursing Maternal–Child Nursing Community & Public Health Nursing Product Features Full-chapter coverage of Nurse’s Pocket Guide, 16th Edition 25 NCLEX-style MCQs per chapter Prioritized nursing diagnoses with interventions & rationales Emphasis on safety, delegation, and clinical prioritization Optimized for nursing test bank 2026 exam standards Whether preparing for unit exams, clinical evaluations, care-plan assignments, or NCLEX-RN readiness, this test bank is an essential tool for confident, diagnosis-driven nursing practice. 3) 8 High-Value SEO Keywords nurse’s pocket guide test bank nursing diagnoses MCQs Doenges nursing study guide nursing care plan test bank nursing test bank 2026 nursing diagnosis practice questions prioritized nursing interventions MCQs NCLEX nursing diagnoses review 4) 10 SEO-Optimized Hashtags #NursesPocketGuide #NursingTestBank2026 #NursingDiagnoses #CarePlanPractice #NursingFundamentals #MedSurgNursing #NCLEXPreparation #NursingStudents #ClinicalReasoning #NursingEducation

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Institution
Nursing
Course
Nursing

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Nurse's Pocket Guide, 16th Edition
Diagnoses, Prioritized Interventions,
And Rationales
16th Edition
• Author(S)Marilynn E. Doenges; Mary
Frances Moorhouse; Alice C. Murr




TEST BANK

1. Reference: Nursing Process — Assessment, Data Collection
& Clustering (Chapter 1: The Nursing Process and Planning
Client Care)
Stem: A 68-year-old postoperative patient reports
shortness of breath and is observed leaning forward,
speaking in short sentences, and having an SpO₂ of 88% on
room air. The nurse’s focused respiratory assessment
reveals bilateral wheezes and accessory muscle use. Which

, nursing action best reflects appropriate assessment
clustering and next step in the nursing process?
A. Document the SpO₂ and airway sounds and continue
routine postoperative checks.
B. Administer PRN opioid for pain to reduce breathing
effort.
C. Immediately initiate oxygen therapy and notify the
provider while preparing for further respiratory
interventions.
D. Encourage deep-breathing and ambulation to mobilize
secretions.
Correct Answer: C
Rationales:
• Correct (C): Per the nursing process, clustered data
(dyspnea, low SpO₂, accessory muscle use, wheezes)
indicate impaired oxygenation requiring immediate
intervention. Initiating oxygen and notifying the provider
are priority actions to prevent deterioration. The Nurse’s
Pocket Guide emphasizes prioritizing interventions that
address ABCs.
• Incorrect (A): Passive documentation without action
ignores hypoxemia; unsafe given SpO₂ 88%.
• Incorrect (B): Opioids depress respiration and are
contraindicated as an immediate response to hypoxia.

, • Incorrect (D): Ambulation/deep-breathing may be
appropriate for mild atelectasis prevention but is unsafe as
first action in acute hypoxemia.
Teaching Point: Cluster assessment cues to identify ABC threats
and act immediately.
Citation: Doenges, M. E., Moorhouse, M. F., & Murr, A. C.
(2024). Nurse’s Pocket Guide (16th ed.). Chapter 1: The Nursing
Process and Planning Client Care.


2. Reference: Nursing Diagnosis Formation — Distinguishing
Problem & Etiology (Chapter 1)
Stem: A 45-year-old with uncontrolled diabetes reports
numbness and burning in both feet. Blood glucose at 360
mg/dL and decreased peripheral sensation are
documented. Which nursing statement best formats a
NANDA-style nursing diagnosis from these data?
A. Diabetic neuropathy related to elevated blood glucose.
B. Risk for injury related to decreased peripheral sensation.
C. Impaired physical mobility related to burning feet.
D. Peripheral neuropathy due to diabetes mellitus.
Correct Answer: B
Rationales:
• Correct (B): The nursing process identifies a risk diagnosis
when hazard exists without current injury. "Risk for injury

, related to decreased peripheral sensation" follows the
problem–etiology format recommended in planning care.
• Incorrect (A): States a medical label (diabetic neuropathy)
rather than a nursing diagnosis focused on patient
response.
• Incorrect (C): Impaired mobility is not clearly supported;
data show sensation loss and pain but not mobility
limitation.
• Incorrect (D): Uses a medical diagnosis and causal phrasing
rather than a nursing diagnostic statement focused on
risk/response.
Teaching Point: Nursing diagnoses state patient responses or
risks, not medical labels.
Citation: Doenges et al., (2024). Chapter 1.


3. Reference: Outcomes/Goals — Writing Measurable,
Patient-Centered Outcomes (Chapter 1)
Stem: A patient with impaired skin integrity has a 4-cm
surgical wound. The nurse writes the goal: “Wound will
heal.” Which revision best makes the expected outcome
measurable and time-limited?
A. “Wound will improve.”
B. “Wound will decrease in size within 2 weeks.”
C. “Patient’s wound will heal completely.”

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Institution
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Course
Nursing

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Uploaded on
January 26, 2026
Number of pages
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