CJE (Latest 2026/2027 Update) | Rasmussen University |
Complete Study Guide | Verified Questions & Answers |
100% Correct Solutions | Grade A
Q: The nurse is caring for four clients. Which client should the nurse first?
Chest pain and sudden dyspnea (shortness of breath) are priority (possible Pulmonary Embolism/
myocardial infarction aka heart attack) this is an immediate threat to life.
Q: The nurse prepares to enter the room of a client with C. difficle diarrhea. What PPE is
required?
Gloves and gown. (Mask are not routinely required unless the risk of splash.)
Q: The nurse is teaching an UAP/unlicensed assistive personnel about precautions. Which
statement shows understanding.
Standard precautions require gloves whenever contact with blood/ bloody fluids may occur.
Q: The nurse is starting an IV on a client. After palpating the vein, what should the nurse do
next?
Hand hygiene and clean gloves are required before inserting the IV.
,Q: The nurse cares for a client on airborne precautions for tuberculosis. Which action is most
important?
Negative-pressure room with N95 use is critical for TB; door closed and mask for transport also,
but room type is key.
Q: The nurse is reinforcing teaching about fire safety. Which action comes first if a fire is
discovered in a client’s room?
RACE: Rescue, Alarm, Contain, Extinguish.
Q: The nurse notes that the side rails are all up on a confused client’s bed. What is the best
action?
All rails up can be considered a restraint; reduce to the least restrictive while maintaining safety.
Q: Which task can the nurse delegate to a UAP?
Standardized tasks such as finger-stick glucose and report results; RN handles teaching,
assessment, evaluation.
,Q: The nurse receives report on four clients. Which client should be assessed first using ABCs?
Respiratory distress with increased work of breathing is top priority.
Q: The nurse prepares to administer medications through a PEG tube. What is the priority
action?
Placement must be verified before instilling anything to prevent aspiration.
Q: A client with pneumonia has the following data: RR 26, SpO₂ 89% on room air, temp
101.5°F, productive cough. What is the priority nursing action?
Low O₂ saturation makes oxygen administration the immediate priority.
Q: Which of the following findings in a client with heart failure requires the most immediate
intervention?
Acute confusion suggests decreased cerebral perfusion/hypoxia—priority.
Q: A COPD client’s baseline SpO₂ is 90–92% on 2 L. Today it is 88% on 2 L with no distress.
What should the nurse do?
Reassess and position first; mild drop with no distress requires further assessment, not
emergency escalation.
, Q: A client with a DVT suddenly complains of sharp chest pain and shortness of breath. What
is the priority action?
Suspected pulmonary embolism → position and oxygen first, then notify provider.
Q: The nurse hears wheezing in a client with asthma. Which medication does the nurse expect
to give first?
Short-acting bronchodilator is the rescue medication for acute wheezing.
Q: A post-op client is receiving 2 L O₂ via nasal cannula and reports incisional pain 8/10. SpO₂
94%, RR 18. What action is best?
Give prescribed opioid as ordered
Q: The nurse identifies which finding as an early sign of hypoxia?
Restlessness and anxiety