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Child Nursing 6th Edition Chapter 1-
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55 Complete 2024: UPDATED 2025 WIT
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H VERIFIED QUESTIONS AND ANSW
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ERS
Test Bank Complete For
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Maternal Child Nursing 6th Edition
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,Chapter 01: Foundations of Maternity, Women’s Health, and Child Health Nursing McKi
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nney: Evolve Resources for Maternal-Child Nursing, 6th Edition
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MULTIPLE CHOICE q
1. Which factor significantly contributed to the shift from home births to hospital births in the ea
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rly 20th century?
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a. Puerperal sepsis was identified as a risk factor in labor and delivery. q q q q q q q q q q q
b. Forceps were developed to facilitate difficult births. q q q q q q
c. The importance of early parental-infant contact was identified.
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d. Technologic developments became available to physicians. q q q q q
ANS: D q
Technologic developments were available to physicians, not lay midwives. So in-
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hospital births increased in order to take advantage of these advancements. Puerperal sepsis has b
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een a known problem for generations. In the late 19th century, Semmelweis discovered how it co
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uld be prevented with improved hygienic practices. The development of forceps is an example o
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f a technology advance made in the early 20th century but is not the only reason birthplaces mov
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ed. Unlike home births, early hospital births hindered bonding between parents and their infants.
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PTS:1 DIF: q
Cognitive Level: Remembering q q q
OBJ:Integrated Process: Teaching-Learning q q
MSC:Client Needs: Safe and Effective Care Environment q q q q q q
2. Family-centered maternity care developed in response to q q q q q q
a. demands by physicians for family involvement in childbirth. q q q q q q q
b. the Sheppard-Towner Act of 1921. q q q q
c. parental requests that infants be allowed to remain with them rather than in a nu
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rsery.
d. changes in pharmacologic management of labor. q q q q q
ANS: C q
As research began to identify the benefits of early extended parent-
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infant contact, parents began to insist that the infant remain with them. This gradually develope
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d into the practice of rooming-in and finally to family-centered maternity care. Family-
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centered care was a request by parents, not physicians. The Sheppard-
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Towner Act of 1921 provided funds for q q q q q q
state-
managed programs for mothers and children. The changes in pharmacologic management of lab
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or were not a factor in family-centered maternity care.
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PTS:1 DIF: q
Cognitive Level: Remembering q q q
OBJ:Integrated Process: Teaching- q q
Learning MSC:Client Needs: Psychosocial Integrityq q q q
3. Which setting for childbirth allows the least amount of parent-infant contact?
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a. Labor/delivery/recovery/postpartum room q
b. Birth center q
c. Traditional hospital birth q q
d. Home birth q
, ANS: C q
In the traditional hospital setting, the mother may see the infant for only short feeding periods, an
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d the infant is cared for in a separate nursery. While this is slowly changing, to more closely resem
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ble other birthing models, the traditional hospital birth still offers the least amount of parent-
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infant contact. The labor/delivery/recovery/postpartum room setting allows increased parent-
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infant contact. Birth centers are set up to allow an increase in parent-infant contact.
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Home births allow an increase in parent-infant contact.
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PTS:1 DIF: q Cognitive Level: Remembering q q
OBJ:Nursing Process: Planning MSC:Client Needs: Health Promotion and M q q q q q q q q
aintenance
4. The
maternity nurse should have a clear understanding of the correct use of a clinical pathw
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ay. One characteristic of clinical pathways is that they
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a. are developed and implemented by nurses.
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b. are used primarily in the pediatric setting.
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c. set specific time lines for sequencing interventions.
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d. are part of the nursing process. q q q q q
ANS: C q
Clinical pathways are standardized, interdisciplinary plans of care devised for patients with a part
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icular health problem. They are used to identify patient outcomes, specify timelines to achieve th
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ose outcomes, direct appropriate interventions and sequencing of interventions, include interven
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tions from a variety of disciplines, promote collaboration, and involve a comprehensive approac
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h to care. They are developed by multiple health care professionals and reflect interdisciplinary
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care. They can be used in multiple settings and for patients throughout the life span. They are not
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part of the nursing process but can be used in conjunction with the nursing process to provide car
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e to patients.
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PTS:1 DIF: q Cognitive Level: Remembering q q
OBJ:Nursing Process: Planning MSC:Client Needs: Safe and Effective Care q q q q q q q q q
Environment
5. A nurse wishes to work to reduce infant mortality in the United States. Which activity would thi
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s nurse most likely participate in?
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a. Creating pamphlets in several different languages using an interpreter.
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b. Assisting women to enroll in Medicaid by their third trimester. q q q q q q q q q
c. Volunteering to provide prenatal care at community centers. q q q q q q q
d. Working as an intake counselor at a women‘s shelter. q q q q q q q q
ANS: C q
Prenatal care is vital to reducing infant mortality and medical costs. This nurse would most likel
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y participate in community service providing prenatal care outreach activities in community cen
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ters, particularly in low-
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income areas. Pamphlets in other languages, enrolling in Medicaid, and working at a women‘s sh
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elter all might impact infant mortality, but the greatest effect would be from assisting women to
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get consistent prenatal care.
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PTS:1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying
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OBJ:Nursing Process: Implementation MSC:Client Needs: Health Promotion and Maintenance
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6. Which statement is true regarding the ―quality assurance‖ or ―incident‖ report?
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a. The report assures the legal department that no problem exists.
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b. Reports are a permanent part of the patient‘s chart. q q q q q q q q
, c. The nurse‘s notes should contain, ―Incident report filed, and copy placed in chart.‖
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d. This report is a form of documentation of an event that may result in legal action.
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ANS: D q
An incident report is used when something occurs that might result in legal action, such as a patie
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nt fall or medication error. It warns the legal department that there may be a problem in a particula
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r patient‘s care. Incident reports are not part of the patient‘s chart; thus the nurses‘ notes should n
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ot contain any reference to them.
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PTS:1 DIF: q
Cognitive Level: Remembering OBJ:I q q q
ntegrated Process: Communication and Documentation MSC:
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Client Needs: Safe and Effective Care Environment
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7. Which woman would be most likely to seek prenatal care?
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a. A 15-year-old who tells her friends, ―I don‘t believe I‘m pregnant.‖
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b. A 20-year-old who is in her first pregnancy and has access to a free prenatal clinic.
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c. A 28-year-old who is in her second pregnancy and abuses drugs and alcohol.
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d. A 30-year-old who is in her fifth pregnancy and delivered her last infant at home.
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ANS: B q
The patient who acknowledges the pregnancy early, has access to health care, and has no reason
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to avoid health care is most likely to seek prenatal care. Being in denial about the pregnancy incr
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eases the risk of not seeking care. This patient is also 15, and other social factors may discourage
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her from seeking care as well. Women who abuse substances are less likely to receive prenatal ca
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re. Some women see pregnancy and delivery as a natural occurrence and do not seek health care.
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PTS:1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding
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OBJ:Nursing Process: Assessment MSC:Client Needs: Health Promotion and Maintenance
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8. A woman who delivered her baby 6 hours ago complains of headache and dizziness. The nurse
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administers an analgesic but does not perform any assessments. The woman then has a tonic-
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clonic seizure, falls out of bed, and fractures her femur. How would the actions of the nurse be
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interpreted in relation to standards of care? q q q q q q
a. Negligent: the nurse failed to assess the woman for possible complications q q q q q q q q q q
b. Negligent: because the nurse medicated the woman q q q q q q
c. Not negligent: the woman had signed a waiver concerning the use of side rails
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d. Not negligent: the woman did not inform the nurse of her symptoms as soon as th
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ey occurred q
ANS: A q
There are four elements to malpractice, which is negligence in the performance of professional
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duties: duty, breach of duty, damage, and proximate cause. The nurse was negligent because sh
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e or he did not perform any assessments, which is the first step of the nursing process and is a sta
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ndard of care. By not assessing the patient, the nurse did not meet established standards of care,
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and thus is guilty of professional negligence, or malpractice.
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PTS:1 DIF: q Cognitive Level: Remembering q q
OBJ:Nursing Process: Evaluation MSC:Client Needs: Safe and Effective Care q q q q q q q q q
Environment
9. Which patient situation fails to meet the first requirement of informed consent?
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a. The patient does not understand the physician‘s explanations.
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