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Nurse’s Pocket Guide 16th Edition Nursing Test Bank 2026 | Nursing Diagnoses, Care Plans, NCLEX-Style Questions

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Nurse’s Pocket Guide 16th Edition Nursing Test Bank 2026 | Nursing Diagnoses, Care Plans, NCLEX-Style Questions Description: Master nursing diagnoses and clinical prioritization with this comprehensive Nurse’s Pocket Guide 16th Edition Nursing Test Bank (2026)—a high-yield digital study resource built specifically for nursing students using Doenges, Moorhouse, & Murr. Designed to reinforce clinical judgment and safe, evidence-based care, this test bank provides full textbook coverage with 25 NCLEX-style MCQs per chapter, each paired with clear, textbook-faithful rationales. Every question emphasizes nursing diagnosis accuracy, priority interventions, safety considerations, and care-plan development, mirroring the clinical reasoning expected in ADN and BSN programs. Items are application- and analysis-focused, supporting exam readiness while strengthening real-world decision-making at the bedside. This resource is intended strictly as a study aid—not an official exam or replacement for assigned coursework. It supports ethical academic use by helping students consolidate concepts, identify knowledge gaps, and practice prioritization aligned with the Nurse’s Pocket Guide framework. Key Features: Complete coverage of all chapters from Nurse’s Pocket Guide, 16th Edition 25 NCLEX-style MCQs per chapter with one best answer Evidence-based rationales grounded in Doenges, Moorhouse, & Murr Strong focus on nursing diagnoses, prioritized interventions, and outcomes Ideal for Fundamentals, Care Planning, Med-Surg, Mental Health, Maternal-Child, and Community Health Digital format for fast review, efficient studying, and concept reinforcement Whether preparing for exams or refining care-plan thinking, this nursing test bank helps students study smarter, prioritize safely, and build confidence in clinical reasoning. Keywords: nurse’s pocket guide 16th edition test bank nursing diagnoses practice questions nursing care plans mcqs nclex style nursing questions nursing process exam prep doenges nursing diagnosis test bank clinical prioritization nursing questions adn bsn nursing study guide Hashtags: #NursingTestBank #NursingDiagnoses #CarePlanPractice #NCLEXStyleQuestions #NursingStudents #ADNtoBSN #ClinicalJudgment #NursingEducation #ExamPrepNursing #CarePlanning

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Institution
NCLEX RN
Course
NCLEX RN

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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
The Nursing Process — Assessment: Subjective vs. Objective
Data
Stem
A 68-year-old postoperative client reports “I feel weak and
dizzy” and you note a blood pressure of 86/54 mm Hg and pale,

,cool skin. Which data should a nurse document as subjective,
and which supports immediate priority action?
A. “I feel weak and dizzy” — subjective; low BP supports
immediate action.
B. Pale, cool skin — subjective; BP supports immediate action.
C. Blood pressure 86/54 mm Hg — subjective; client complaint
supports immediate action.
D. Pale, cool skin — objective; client complaint is not useful for
immediate action.
Correct answer: A
Rationales
Correct (A): “I feel weak and dizzy” is a subjective report
(client’s own words); blood pressure 86/54 mm Hg is objective,
measurable data that explains the complaint and requires
immediate priority action for perfusion. This distinction aligns
with chapter guidance on subjective (verbal) versus objective
(observable/measurable) data and using both to set priorities.
Incorrect (B): Pale, cool skin is objective, not subjective. While it
supports urgent action, the option mislabels the cue.
Incorrect (C): BP is an objective finding, not subjective. The
client’s complaint adds context but objective hypotension is the
immediate physiological cue.
Incorrect (D): The client complaint is useful—subjective data
help interpret objective findings and guide interventions.
Teaching point: Subjective = patient-reported; objective =
observed/measured; both guide priority action.

,Citation: Doenges, M. E., Moorhouse, M. F., & Murr, A. C.
(2022). Nurse’s Pocket Guide (16th ed.). The Nursing Process
and Planning Client Care.


2
Reference
The Nursing Process — Five Steps and Their Sequence
Stem
A new graduate nurse prepares a care plan. Which sequence
best reflects the nursing process as presented in Chapter 1?
A. Implementation → Assessment → Diagnosis → Evaluation →
Planning
B. Assessment → Diagnosis → Planning → Implementation →
Evaluation
C. Diagnosis → Assessment → Planning → Implementation →
Evaluation
D. Assessment → Planning → Diagnosis → Implementation →
Evaluation
Correct answer: B
Rationales
Correct (B): Chapter 1 defines the five sequential steps as
assessment, diagnosis, planning, implementation, and
evaluation—this order supports systematic clinical reasoning
and documentation.
Incorrect (A): Implementation cannot precede assessment and

, diagnosis; doing so risks unsafe, non-individualized care.
Incorrect (C): Diagnosis requires data from assessment;
reversing them is illogical.
Incorrect (D): Planning requires the diagnostic statement that
results from assessment; diagnosis must come before planning.
Teaching point: Follow ADPIE: Assess → Diagnose → Plan →
Implement → Evaluate.
Citation: Doenges et al. (2022). Chapter 1.


3
Reference
Data Analysis and Diagnostic Statement Construction (PES
format)
Stem
A client has poor glucose monitoring, missed insulin doses, and
frequent fasting blood glucose readings >250 mg/dL. According
to Chapter 1 guidance on diagnostic statements, which PES-
style nursing diagnostic statement is best?
A. Risk for unstable blood glucose level related to missed
injections.
B. Unstable blood glucose level as evidenced by fasting blood
glucose >250 mg/dL.
C. Risk for unstable blood glucose level as evidenced by missed
doses and poor monitoring.
D. Risk for unstable blood glucose level related to inadequate

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