Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

NUR 101/ NUR101 Exam 4 – Health Assessment Review ACTUAL EXAM 2026/2027 | Health Assessment Review | Verified Q&A | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
41
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
12-06-2026
Written in
2025/2026

Pass your cumulative health assessment exam with this 2026/2027 complete actual exam for NUR 101 Exam 4 – Health Assessment Review at Fortis. This 100% verified Q&A set covers comprehensive assessment synthesis, diagnostic reasoning and clinical decision-making, documentation and reporting of findings, integration of data into care planning, and competency evaluation across the lifespan. Each answer includes a detailed rationale to solidify clinical judgment. Backed by our Pass Guarantee. Download now.

Show more Read less
Institution
NUR 101/ NUR101
Course
NUR 101/ NUR101

Content preview

​ UR 101/ NUR101 Exam 4 – Health​
N
​Assessment Review ACTUAL EXAM​
​2026/2027 | Health Assessment Review |​
​Verified Q&A | Pass Guaranteed - A+​
​Graded​

​ ART A – MULTIPLE CHOICE (Q1‑60)​
P
​Q1 (Clinical reasoning – diagnostic test selection): A 58-year-old male presents with sudden​
​onset dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and tachycardia. He recently had knee replacement surgery​
​5 days ago. The nurse practitioner uses the Wells score to assess pre-test probability. Which​
​Wells criterion carries the HIGHEST point value?​
​A. Clinical signs of DVT (3 points)​
​B. Alternative diagnosis less likely than PE (3 points)​
​C. Heart rate >100 bpm (1.5 points)​
​D. Immobilization or surgery within 4 weeks (1.5 points)​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: The Wells score for PE assigns 3 points to "alternative diagnosis less likely than PE,"​
​which is the highest-weighted criterion, reflecting its strong discriminatory value in clinical​
​reasoning. Option A (clinical signs of DVT) also carries 3 points, but "alternative diagnosis less​
​likely" is the most critical clinical judgment point and is often emphasized in teaching. Option C​
​(tachycardia) and D (immobilization) carry only 1.5 points each.​
​Clinical pearl: When Wells score is >4 (high probability), imaging (CT pulmonary angiography) is​
​indicated without waiting for D-dimer results.​
​Q2 (Special populations – bariatric assessment): A nurse is preparing to obtain vital signs on a​
​patient with BMI 48. Which action is MOST appropriate for accurate blood pressure​
​measurement?​
​A. Use a standard adult cuff on the forearm if the upper arm is too large​
​B. Use a thigh cuff on the upper arm to ensure complete encirclement​
​C. Use a large adult cuff (15 cm width) regardless of arm circumference​
​D. Use a wrist blood pressure monitor for consistency​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: For patients with large upper arms (>33 cm circumference), a thigh cuff (18 cm width)​
​should be used on the upper arm to ensure the bladder encircles at least 80% of the arm​
​circumference, per AHA guidelines. Option A (forearm measurement) produces falsely elevated​
​readings due to increased vascular resistance distal to the brachial artery. Option C (standard​

,l​arge adult cuff) is insufficient for arms >33 cm. Option D (wrist monitors) are less accurate and​
​should be avoided in bariatric patients.​
​Clinical pearl: Always measure arm circumference before selecting a cuff; using an undersized​
​cuff can overestimate BP by 10-30 mmHg.​
​Q3 (Mental health assessment – suicide risk): A 24-year-old college student is brought to the​
​clinic by a roommate who found a note mentioning "ending it all." Using the C-SSRS screening​
​tool, which question assesses the CRITICAL distinction between passive ideation and active​
​suicidal intent?​
​A. "Have you wished you were dead or wished you could go to sleep and not wake up?"​
​B. "Have you had these thoughts and had some intention of acting on them?"​
​C. "Have you been thinking about how you might do this?"​
​D. "Have you done anything to end your life?"​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: The C-SSRS distinguishes passive suicidal ideation (wishing to be dead) from active​
​suicidal intent by asking whether the patient has intention to act on thoughts, which is the critical​
​threshold for immediate safety intervention. Option A assesses passive ideation only. Option C​
​assesses suicidal planning (means/method) but not necessarily intent. Option D assesses past​
​suicide attempts.​
​Clinical pearl: Intent to act (not just ideation or planning) is the strongest predictor of imminent​
​suicide risk and requires immediate psychiatric evaluation and safety planning.​
​Q4 (Substance use assessment): A nurse is screening a patient for alcohol use disorder using​
​the AUDIT-C. Which response pattern would yield the HIGHEST possible score, indicating the​
​greatest concern?​
​A. Drinking 4+ times weekly, 5+ drinks per occasion, unable to cut down​
​B. Drinking 2-3 times monthly, 3-4 drinks per occasion, felt guilty​
​C. Drinking 2-4 times monthly, 2-3 drinks per occasion, needed eye-opener​
​D. Drinking 2-3 times weekly, 5-6 drinks per occasion, injured someone​
​[CORRECT] A​
​Rationale: The AUDIT-C scores frequency (0-4 points), quantity (0-4 points), and binge​
​drinking/inability to cut down (0-4 points), with a maximum of 12 points; option A describes the​
​highest frequency (4+ times = 4 points), highest quantity (5+ drinks = 4 points), and inability to​
​cut down (4 points) = 12 points total. Option D describes high quantity but lower frequency.​
​Options B and C describe lower overall patterns.​
​Clinical pearl: An AUDIT-C score ≥4 in men or ≥3 in women indicates unhealthy alcohol use​
​requiring brief intervention; scores ≥8 suggest alcohol use disorder requiring formal evaluation.​
​Q5 (Environmental/occupational health): A nurse in an occupational health clinic is assessing a​
​45-year-old construction worker who reports chronic cough, dyspnea on exertion, and chest​
​tightness. He has worked in demolition for 20 years. Which exposure is MOST likely​
​responsible?​
​A. Silica dust from concrete cutting​
​B. Lead paint from older buildings​
​C. Carbon monoxide from gasoline-powered equipment​
​D. Mold from water-damaged structures​
​[CORRECT] A​

,​ ationale: Chronic silica exposure in construction/demolition causes silicosis, presenting with​
R
​progressive dyspnea, cough, and restrictive lung disease; silica is classified as a human​
​carcinogen by IARC. Option B (lead) primarily causes neurological and hematologic effects, not​
​chronic respiratory symptoms. Option C (carbon monoxide) causes acute poisoning, not chronic​
​cough. Option D (mold) can cause allergic reactions but is less likely to produce progressive​
​restrictive lung disease in this occupational context.​
​Clinical pearl: OSHA requires silica exposure monitoring and respiratory protection; workers​
​with >10 years of silica exposure should receive periodic chest X-rays.​
​Q6 (Genetic and genomic assessment): A nurse is constructing a three-generation pedigree for​
​a patient whose father has Huntington disease and whose mother is unaffected. What is the​
​probability that this patient has inherited the Huntington gene?​
​A. 25%​
​B. 50%​
​C. 75%​
​D. 100%​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Huntington disease is an autosomal dominant disorder; an affected parent has a 50%​
​chance of transmitting the mutated gene to each offspring, regardless of the unaffected parent's​
​status. Option A (25%) would apply to autosomal recessive inheritance with two carrier parents.​
​Option C (75%) has no basis in Mendelian inheritance. Option D (100%) would only apply if​
​both parents were affected.​
​Clinical pearl: Autosomal dominant conditions show vertical transmission (affected individuals in​
​every generation), and genetic counseling is essential before predictive testing due to​
​psychological implications of knowing one's status.​
​Q7 (LGBTQ+ health assessment): A nurse is conducting a sexual history with a transgender​
​man (female-to-male) who has not undergone bottom surgery. Which question is MOST​
​inclusive and clinically relevant for STI screening?​
​A. "Do you have sex with men, women, or both?"​
​B. "What anatomy do you have that you use for sexual activity?"​
​C. "When was your last menstrual period?"​
​D. "Are you taking testosterone for transition?"​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Asking about anatomy used for sexual activity is the most inclusive approach that​
​captures actual sexual practices and exposure risks without making assumptions about gender​
​identity or surgical status, per WPATH standards. Option A focuses on partner gender but may​
​miss anatomical risk factors. Option C assumes retained uterine function and may be​
​dysphoria-triggering. Option D, while relevant to overall health, does not directly inform STI​
​screening needs.​
​Clinical pearl: Use anatomically inclusive language (e.g., "front hole" or "genitals" as patient​
​prefers) and screen based on anatomy present, not gender identity alone.​
​Q8 (Clinical reasoning – cognitive bias): A nurse practitioner evaluates a 62-year-old with chest​
​pain and immediately attributes it to GERD because the patient had GERD documented three​
​years ago. The NP fails to order an ECG. Which cognitive bias is demonstrated?​
​A. Anchoring bias​

, ​ . Premature closure​
B
​C. Confirmation bias​
​D. Availability heuristic​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Premature closure occurs when a clinician accepts a diagnosis before it has been​
​fully verified, stopping the diagnostic process prematurely; attributing chest pain to GERD​
​without ruling out cardiac causes exemplifies this dangerous error. Option A (anchoring)​
​involves over-relying on the first piece of information. Option C (confirmation bias) involves​
​seeking evidence to support a preconceived notion. Option D (availability heuristic) involves​
​judging probability based on recent memorable cases.​
​Clinical pearl: Chest pain in patients over 40 requires cardiac workup (ECG, troponins)​
​regardless of prior GERD diagnosis—always rule out life-threatening causes before accepting​
​benign explanations.​
​Q9 (Veterans health assessment): A nurse is screening a 34-year-old Iraq veteran for PTSD​
​using the PC-PTSD-5. Which symptom cluster is NOT included in this validated screening tool?​
​A. Re-experiencing (nightmares, flashbacks)​
​B. Avoidance (avoiding reminders)​
​C. Negative alterations in cognition/mood​
​D. Hyperarousal (hypervigilance, startle response)​
​[CORRECT] C​
​Rationale: The PC-PTSD-5 screens for re-experiencing, avoidance, hyperarousal, and numbing​
​(4 clusters), but does NOT include the DSM-5 "negative alterations in cognition and mood"​
​cluster, which requires more detailed clinical assessment. Options A, B, and D are all included​
​in the PC-PTSD-5.​
​Clinical pearl: A positive screen on PC-PTSD-5 (≥3 "yes" answers) requires referral for​
​comprehensive PTSD evaluation; veterans with burn pit exposure should also be screened for​
​respiratory conditions per 2022 PACT Act.​
​Q10 (Nutritional assessment – eating disorders): A nurse is assessing a 19-year-old female with​
​BMI 16.5 who reports restricting intake to 800 calories daily and exercising 3 hours daily. Which​
​finding is MOST concerning for imminent refeeding syndrome risk?​
​A. Serum potassium 3.2 mEq/L​
​B. Serum phosphorus 2.8 mg/dL​
​C. Recent weight loss of 15% in 3 months​
​D. Bradycardia (HR 48 bpm)​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Hypophosphatemia (phosphorus <2.5 mg/dL) is the hallmark and most dangerous​
​manifestation of refeeding syndrome, which can cause cardiac failure, respiratory failure, and​
​death; a level of 2.8 mg/dL indicates depletion and high risk. Option A (hypokalemia) also​
​occurs but is less specific. Option C (rapid weight loss) is a risk factor but not an active​
​metabolic derangement. Option D (bradycardia) reflects starvation adaptation.​
​Clinical pearl: Before refeeding malnourished patients, check and replete phosphorus,​
​potassium, and magnesium; start nutrition at 10-20 kcal/kg and advance slowly with daily​
​electrolyte monitoring.​

Written for

Institution
NUR 101/ NUR101
Course
NUR 101/ NUR101

Document information

Uploaded on
June 12, 2026
Number of pages
41
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

$10.49
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
oketchnyasakwa

Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
NUR 101/ NUR101 Exam 1,Exam 2,Exam 3, Exam 4 & HESI – Health Assessment| Fortis (Latest 2026/ 2027 Updates STUDY BUNDLE PACKAGE WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS) 100% Verified Questions & Answers | Grade A
-
10 2026
$ 44.45 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
oketchnyasakwa Chamberlain College Of Nursing
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
3
Member since
4 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
374
Last sold
3 days ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

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

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions