Fundamentals of Nursing Active Learning for Collaborative Practice 3rd Edition Yoost Test Bank
FUNDAMENTALS OF NURSING ACTIVE LEARNING FOR COLLABORATIVE PRACTICE 3RD EDITION YOOST TEST BANK 2023 latest update 2 Fundamentals of Nursing Active Learning for Collaborative Practice 3rd Edition Yoost Test Bank Table of Contents 1.Nursing, Theory, and Professional Practice 2.Values, Beliefs, and Caring 3.Communication 4.Critical Thinking in Nursing 5.Introduction to the Nursing Process 6.Assessment 7.Nursing Diagnosis 8.Planning 9.Implementation and Evaluation 10.Documentation, Electronic Health Records, and Reporting 11.Ethical and Legal Considerations 12.Leadership and Management 13.Evidence-Based Practice and Nursing Research 14.Health Literacy and Patient Education 15.Nursing Informatics 16.Health and Wellness 17.Human Development: Conception through Adolescence 18.Human Development: Young Adult through Older Adult 19.Vital Signs 20.Health History and Physical Assessment 21.Ethnicity and Cultural Assessment 22.Spiritual Health 23.Public Health, Community-Based, and Home Health Care 24.Human Sexuality 25.Safety 26.Asepsis and Infection Control 27.Hygiene and Personal Care 28.Activity, Immobility, and Safe Movement 29.Skin Integrity and Wound Care 30.Nutrition 31.Cognitive and Sensory Alterations 32.Stress and Coping 33.Sleep 34.Diagnostic Testing 35.Medication Administration 36.Pain Management 37.Perioperative Nursing Care 38.Oxygenation and Tissues Perfusion 3 39.Fluid, Electrolyte, and Acid-Base Balance 40.Bowel Elimination 41.Urinary Elimination 42.Death and Loss Chapter 01: Nursing, Theory, and Professional Practice Yoost & Crawford: Fundamentals of Nursing: Active Learning for Collaborative Practice, 3rd Edition MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. A group of nursing students are discussing the impact of nonnursing theories in clinical practice. The students would be correct if they chose which theory to prioritize patient care? a. Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory b. Paul’s Critical-Thinking Theory c. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs d. Rosenstock’s Health Belief Model ANS: C Maslow’s hierarchy of needs specifies the psychological and physiologic factors that affect each person’s physical and mental health. The nurse’s understanding of these factors helps with formulating Nursing diagnoses that address the patient’s needs and values to prioritize care. Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory of Development and Socialization is based on individuals’ interacting and learning about their world. Nurses use concepts of developmental theory to critically think in providing care for their patients at various stages of their lives. Rosenstock (1974) developed the psychological Health Belief Model. The model addresses possible reasons for why a patient may not comply with recommended health promotion behaviors. This model is especially useful to nurses as they educate patients. DIF: Remembering OBJ: 1.5 TOP: Planning MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 2. A nursing student is preparing study notes from a recent lecture in nursing history. The student would credit Florence Nightingale for which definition of nursing? a. The imbalance between the patient and the environment decreases the capacity for health. b. The nurse needs to focus on interpersonal processes between nurse and patient. c. The nurse assists the patient with essential functions toward independence. d. Human beings are interacting in continuous motion as energy fields. ANS: A Florence Nightingale’s (1860) concept of the environment emphasized prevention and clean air, water, and housing. This theory states that the imbalance between the patient and the environment decreases the capacity for health and does not allow for conservation of energy. Hildegard Peplau (1952) focused on the roles played by the nurse and the interpersonal process between a nurse and a patient. Virginia Henderson described the nurse’s role as 4 substitutive (doing for the person), supplementary (helping the person), or complementary (working with the person), with the goal of independence for the patient. Martha Rogers (1970) developed the Science of Unitary Human Beings. She stated that human beings and their environments are interacting in continuous motion as infinite energy fields. DIF: Understanding OBJ: 1.4 TOP: Planning MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Health Promotion and Maintenance NOT: Concepts: Health Promotion 3. The nurse identifies which nurse established the American Red Cross during the Civil War? a. Dorothea Dix b. Linda Richards c. Lena Higbee d. Clara Barton ANS: D Clara Barton practiced nursing in the Civil War and established the American Red Cross. Dorothea Dix was the head of the U.S. Sanitary Commission, which was a forerunner of the Army Nurse Corps. Linda Richards was America’s first trained nurse, graduating from Boston’s Women’s Hospital in 1873, and Lena Higbee, superintendent of the U.S. Navy Nurse Corps, was awarded the Navy Cross in 1918. DIF: Remembering OBJ: 1.3 TOP: Assessment MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Health Promotion and Maintenance NOT: Concepts: Professionalism 4. The nursing instructor is researching the five proficiencies regarded as essential for students and professionals. The nursing instructor identifies which organization would be found to have added safety as a sixth competency? a. Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) b. Institute of Medicine (IOM) c. American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) d. National League for Nursing (NLN) ANS: A The Institute of Medicine report health professions Education: A Bridge to Quality (2003), outlines five core competencies. These include patient-centered care, interdisciplinary teamwork, use of evidence-based medicine, quality improvement, and use of information technology. QSEN added safety as a sixth competency. The Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice are provided and updated by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) (2008). The document offers a framework for the education of professional nurses with outcomes for students to meet. The National League for Nursing (NLN) outlines and updates competencies for practical, associate, baccalaureate, and graduate nursing education programs. DIF: Remembering OBJ: 1.1 TOP: Planning MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 5 5. The nurse manager is interviewing graduate nurses to fill existing staffing vacancies. When hiring graduate nurses, the nurse manager realizes that they will probably not be considered “competent” until they complete which task? a. They graduate and pass NCLEX. b. They have worked 2 to 3 years. c. Their last year of nursing school. d. They are actually hired. ANS: B Benner’s model identifies five levels of proficiency: novice, advanced beginner, competent, proficient, and expert. The student nurse progresses from novice to advanced beginner during nursing school and attains the competent level after approximately 2 to 3 years of work experience after graduation. To obtain the RN credential, a person must graduate from an approved school of nursing and pass a state licensing examination called the National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses (NCLEX-RN) usually taken soon after completion of an approved nursing program. DIF: Remembering OBJ: 1.7 TOP: Planning MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 6. The prospective student is considering options for beginning a career in nursing. Which degree would best match the student’s desire to conduct research at the university level? a. Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) b. Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) c. Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) d. Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing (PhD) ANS: D Doctoral nursing education can result in a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree. This degree prepares nurses for leadership roles in research, teaching, and administration that are essential to advancing nursing as a profession. Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) programs usually are conducted in a community college setting. The nursing curriculum focuses on adult acute and chronic disease; maternal/child health; pediatrics; and psychiatric/mental health nursing. ADN RNs may return to school to earn a bachelor’s degree or higher in an RN-to-BSN or RNto-MSN program. Bachelor’s degree programs include community health and management courses beyond those provided in an associate degree program. A newer practice-focused doctoral degree is the Doctor of Nursing practice (DNP), which concentrates on the clinical aspects of nursing. DNP specialties include the four advanced practice roles of NP, CNS, CNM, and CRNA. DIF: Remembering OBJ: 1.9 TOP: Assessment MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 6 7. During a staff meeting, the nurse manager announces that the hospital will be seeking Magnet status. To explain the requirements for this award, the nurse manager will contact which organization? a. American Nurses Association (ANA) b. American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) c. National League for Nursing (NLN) d. Joint Commission ANS: B The American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) awards Magnet Recognition to hospitals that have shown excellence and innovation in nursing. The ANA is a professional organization that provides standards of nursing practice. The National League for Nursing (NLN) outlines and updates competencies for practical, associate, baccalaureate, and graduate nursing education programs. The Joint Commission is the accrediting organization for health care facilities in the United States. DIF: Remembering OBJ: 1.1 TOP: Assessment MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 8. The nurse is caring for a patient who refuses two units of packed red blood cells. When the nurse notifies the health care provider of the patient’s decision, the nurse is acting in which role? a. Manager b. Change agent c. Advocate d. Educator ANS: C As the patient’s advocate, the nurse interprets information and provides the necessary education. The nurse then accepts and respects the patient’s decisions even if they are different from the nurse’s own beliefs. The nurse supports the patient’s wishes and communicates them to other health care providers. A nurse manages all of the activities and treatments for patients. In the role of change agent, the nurse works with patients to address their health concerns and with staff members to address change in an organization or within a community. The nurse ensures that the patient receives sufficient information on which to base consent for care and related treatment. Education becomes a major focus of discharge planning so that patients will be prepared to handle their own needs at home. DIF: Applying OBJ: 1.2 TOP: Implementation MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 9. The nursing student develops a plan of care based on a recently published article describing the effects of bed rest on a patient’s calcium blood levels. When creating the plan of care, the nursing student has the obligation to consider which action? a. Critically appraise the evidence and determine validity. b. Ensure that the plan of care does not alter current practice. c. Change the process even when there is no problem identified. 7 d. Maintain the plan of care regardless of initial outcome. ANS: A Evidence-based practice (EBP) is an integration of the best-available research evidence with clinical judgment about a specific patient situation. The nurse assesses current and past research, clinical guidelines, and other resources to identify relevant literature. The application of EBP includes critically appraising the evidence to assess its validity, designing a change for practice, assessing the need for change and identifying a problem, and integrating and maintaining change while monitoring process and outcomes by reevaluating the application of evidence and assessing areas for improvement. DIF: Applying OBJ: 1.2 TOP: Implementation MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 10. The nurse is delegating frequent blood pressure (BP) measurements for a patient admitted with a gunshot wound to a licensed practical nurse (LPN). When delegating, the nurse understands which fact? a. He/she may assume that the LPN is able to perform this task appropriately. b. The LPN is ultimately responsible for the patient findings and assessment. c. The LPN may perform the tasks assigned without further supervision. d. He/she retains ultimate responsibility for patient care and supervision is needed. ANS: D The RN retains ultimate responsibility for patient care, which requires supervision of those to whom patient care is delegated. In the process of collaboration, the nurse delegates certain activities to other health care personnel. The RN needs to know the scope of practice or capabilities of each health care member for delegation to be effective and safe. DIF: Understanding OBJ: 1.2 TOP: Implementation MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 11. The nurse is preparing to discharge a patient admitted with fever of unknown origin. The patient states, “I never got past the fifth grade in school. Don’t read much. Never saw much sense in it. But I do OK. I can read most stuff. But my doctor explains things good and doesn’t think that my sickness is serious.” Considering this patient response, what action should the nurse carry out? a. Provide discharge medication information from a professional source to provide the most information. b. Expect that the patient may return to the hospital if the discharge process is poorly c. Assume that the physician and the pdone. atient have a good rapport and that the physician will clarify everything. d. Defer offering the patient the opportunity to sign up for wellness classes due to the low literacy rate. 8 ANS: B Low health literacy is associated with increased hospitalization, greater emergency care use, lower use of mammography, and lower receipt of influenza vaccine. A goal of patient education by the nurse is to inform patients and deliver information that is understandable by examining their level of health literacy. The more understandable health information is for patients, the closer the care is coordinated with need. DIF: Applying OBJ: 1.2 TOP: Implementation MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Health Promotion 12. A nurse is caring for a patient who lost a large amount of blood during childbirth. The nurse provides the opportunity for the patient to maintain her activity level while providing adequate periods of rest and encouragement. Which nursing theory would the nurse most likely choose as a framework for addressing the fatigue associated with the low blood count? a. Watson Human Caring Theory b. Parse’s Theory of Human Becoming c. Roy’s Adaptation Model d. Rogers’ Science of Unitary Human Beings ANS: C Roy’s Adaptation Model is based on the human being as an adaptive open system. The person adapts by meeting physiologic-physical needs, developing a positive self-concept–group identity, performing social role functions, and balancing dependence and independence. Stressors result in illness by disrupting the equilibrium. Nursing care is directed at altering stimuli that are stressors to the patient. The nurse helps patients strengthen their abilities to adapt to their illnesses or helps them to develop adaptive behaviors. Watson’s theory is based on caring, with nurses dedicated to health and healing. The nurse functions to preserve the dignity and wholeness of humans in health or while peacefully dying. Parse’s theory is called the Human Becoming School of Thought. Parse formulated the Theory of Human Becoming by combining concepts from Martha Rogers’ Science of Unitary Human Beings with existential-phenomenologic thought. This theory looks at the person as a constantly changing being, and at nursing as a human science. Martha Rogers (1970) developed the Science of Unitary Human Beings. She stated that human beings and their environments are interacting in continuous motion as infinite energy fields. DIF: Applying OBJ: 1.4 TOP: Implementation MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Safe and Effective Care Environment: Management of Care NOT: Concepts: Care Coordination 13. The nurse recognizes which nursing theorist who described the relationship between the nurse and the patient as an interpersonal and therapeutic process? a. Virginia Henderson b. Betty Neuman c. Imogene King d. Hildegard Peplau ANS: D 9 Hildegard Peplau focused on the roles played by the nurse and the interpersonal process between a nurse and a patient. The interpersonal process occurs in overlapping phases: (1) orientation, (2) working, consisting of two subphases: identification and exploitation, and (3) resolution. Betty Neuman’s Systems Model includes a holistic concept and an open-system approach. The model identifies energy resources that provide for basic survival, with lines of resistance that are activated when a stressor invades the system. Virginia Henderson described the nurse’s role as substitutive (doing for the person), supplementary (helping the person), or complementary (working with the person), with the ultimate goal of independence for the patient. Imogene King developed a general systems framework that incorporates three levels of systems: (1) individual or personal, (2) group or interpersonal, and (3) society or social. The theory of goal attainment discusses the importance of interaction, perception, communication, transaction, self, role, stress, growth and development, time, and personal space. In this theory, both the nurse and the patient work together to achieve the goals in the continuous adjustment to stressors. DIF: Remembering OBJ: 1.4 TOP: Assessment MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity: Physiological Adaptation NOT: Concepts: Health Promotion 14. When a nursing class volunteers to serve hot meals at a local homeless shelter on a Saturday afternoon, which term identifies this focus on serving the community? a. Altruism b. Accountability c. Autonomy d. Advocate ANS: A A profession provides services needed by society. Additionally, practitioners’ motivation is public service over personal gain (altruism). Service to the public requires intellectual activities, which include responsibility. This accountability has legal, ethical, and professional implications. Members of a profession have autonomy in decision making and practice and are self-regulating in that they develop
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