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NCLEX Practice Questions Exam 1 Questions and Answers 100% pass

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NCLEX Practice Questions Exam 1 Questions and Answers 100% pass . A nurse assesses patients in a physician's office who are experiencing different levels of health and illness. Which statements best define the concepts of health and illness? Select all that apply. a. Health and illness are the same for all people. b. Health and illness are individually defined by each person. c. People with acute illnesses are actually healthy. d. People with chronic illnesses have poor health beliefs. e. Health is more than the absence of illness. f. Illness is the response of a person to a disease. - b, e, f. Each person defines health and illness individually, based on a number of factors. Health is more than just the absence of illness; it is an active process in which a person moves toward one's maximum potential. An illness is the response of the person to a disease. A caregiver asks a nurse to explain respite care. How would the nurse respond? a. "A service that allows time away for caregivers" b. "A special service for the terminally ill and their family" c. "Direct care provided to individuals in a long-term care facility" d. "Living units for people without regular shelter" - a. Respite care is provided to enable a primary caregiver time away from the day-to-day responsibilities of homebound patients. A nurse cares for dying patients by providing physical, psychological, social, and spiritual care for the patients, their families, and other loved ones. This service is known as: a. Respite care b. Palliative care c. Hospice care d. Extended care - c. The hospice nurse combines the skills of the home care nurse with the ability to provide daily emotional support to dying patients and their families. Respite care is a type of care provided for caregivers of homebound ill, disabled, or older patients. Palliative care, which can be used inconjunction with medical treatment and in all types of health care settings, is focused on the relief of physical, mental, and spiritual distress. Extended-care facilities include transitional subacute care, assisted-living facilities, intermediate and long-term care, homes for medically fragile children, retirement centers, and residential institutions for mentally and developmentally or physically disabled patients of all ages. A nurse caring for patients in a primary care setting submits paperwork for reimbursement from managed care plans for services performed. Which purpose best describes managed care as a framework for health care? a. A design to control the cost of care while maintaining the quality of care b. Care coordination to maximize positive outcomes to contain costs c. The delivery of services from initial contact through ongoing care d. Based on a philosophy of ensuring death in comfort and dignity - a. Managed care is a way of providing care designed to control costs while maintaining the quality of care. A nurse follows accepted guidelines for a healthy lifestyle. How can this promote health in others? a. By being a role model for healthy behaviors b. By not requiring sick days from work c. By never exposing others to any type of illness d. By spending less money on food - a. Good personal health enables the nurse to serve as a role model for patients and families. A nurse has volunteered to give influenza immunizations at a local clinic. What level of care is the nurse demonstrating? a. Tertiary b. Secondary c. Primary d. Promotive - c. Giving influenza injections is an example of primary health promotion and illness prevention. A nurse is caring for a patient in the ICU who is being monitored for a possible cerebral aneurysm following a loss of consciousness in the emergency room. The nurse anticipates preparing the patient for ordered diagnostic tests. This nurse's knowledge of the diagnostic procedures for this condition reflects which aspect of nursing? a. The art of nursing b. The science of nursing c. The caring aspect of nursing d. The holistic approach to nursing - b. The science of nursing is the knowledge base for care that is provided. In contrast, the skilled application of that knowledge is the art of nursing. Providing holistic care to patients based on the science of nursing is considered the art of nursing. A nurse is caring for patients in a primary care center. What is the most likely role of this nurse based on the setting? a. Assisting with major surgery b. Performing a health assessment c. Maintaining patients' function and independence d. Keeping student immunization records up to date - b. Performing patient assessments is a common role of the nurse in a primary care center. Assisting with major surgery is a role of the nurse in the hospital setting. Maintaining patients' function and independence is a role of the nurse in an extended-care facility, and keeping student immunization records up to date is a role of the school nurse. A nurse is evaluating a patient diagnosed with renaldisease for treatment in a Hospital at Home program. Whichstatement accurately describes a step in this program? a. The patient is evaluated upon hospital admission and is given daily nursing care in the home after discharge for as long as necessary. b. Any urgent or emergent situation requires an ambulance trip from the home to the hospital. c. Patients are transported to physicians' offices from the home for weekly evaluations. d. The clinicians use care pathways, clinical outcome evaluations, and specific discharge criteria. - d. In the Hospital at Home program, the clinicians use care pathways including illness-specific care maps, clinical outcome evaluations, and specific discharge criteria. A patient requiring admission for one of the target illnesses is identified in the emergency department or ambulatory site. Staff assess whether the patient is a good candidate for the program using validated criteria. If the patient is eligible and consents to participate, the Hospital at Home physician evaluates the patient, who is then transported home, usually by ambulance. Nurses are available 24 hours a day/7 days a week for any urgent or emergent situations. The patient is evaluated daily in the home by the Hospital at Home physician, who completes an assessment and continues to implement appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic measures. A nurse is practicing as a nurse-midwife in a busy OB-GYN office. Which degree in nursing is necessary to practice at this level? a. LPN b. ADN c. BSN d. MSN - d. A master's degree (MSN) prepares advanced practice nurses. Many master's graduates gain national certification in their specialty area, for example, as family nurse practitioners (FNPs) or nurse midwives. A nurse is practicing community-based nursing in a mobile health clinic. What would be the central focus of this nurse's care? a. Individual and family health care needs b. Populations within the community c. Local health care facilities d. Families in crisis - a. In contrast to community health nursing, whichfocuses on populations within a community, community-based nursing is centered on individual and family health care needs. Community-based nurses may help families in crisis and work in health care facilities, but these are not the focus of community-based nursing A nurse is providing care based on Maslow's hierarchy of basic human needs. For which nursing activities is this approach useful? a. Making accurate nursing diagnoses b. Establishing priorities of care c. Communicating concerns more concisely d. Integrating science into nursing care - b. Maslow's hierarchy of basic human needs is useful for establishing priorities of care. A nurse is providing secondary health care to patients in a health care facility. Which patients are receiving this level of care? Select all that apply. a. A patient enters a community clinic with signs of strep throat. b. A patient is admitted to the hospital following a myocardial infarction. c. A mother brings her son to the emergency department following a seizure. d. A patient with osteogenesis imperfecta is being treated in a medical center. e. A mother brings her son to a specialist to correct a congenital heart defect. f. A woman has a hernia repair in an ambulatory care center. - b, c, f. Secondary health care treats problems that require specialized clinical expertise, such as an MI, a seizure, and a hernia repair. Treating strep throat is primary health care.Tertiary health care involves management of rare and complex disorders, such as osteogenesis imperfecta and congenital heart malformations. A nurse performs an assessment of a family consisting of a single mother, a grandmother, and two children. Which interview questions directed to the single mother could the nurse use to assess the affective and coping family function? Select all that apply. a. Who is the person you depend on for emotional support? b. Who is the breadwinner in your family? c. Do you plan on having any more children? d. Who keeps your family together in times of stress? e. What family traditions do you pass on to your children? f. Do you live in an environment that you consider safe? - a, d. The five major areas of family function are physical, economic, reproductive, affective and coping, and socialization. Asking who provides emotional support in times of stress assesses the affective and coping function. Assessing the breadwinner focuses on the economic function. Inquiring about having more children assesses the reproductive function, asking about family traditions assesses the socialization function, and checking the environment assesses the physical function. A nurse researcher keeps current on the trends to watch in healthcare delivery. What trends are likely included? Select all that apply. a. Globalization of economy and society b. Slowdown in technology development c. Decreasing diversity d. Increasing complexity of patient care e. Changing demographics f. Shortages of key health care professionals and educators - a, d, e, f. Trends to watch in health care delivery include: globalization of the economy and society, increasing complexity of patient care, changing demographics, shortages of key health care professionals and educators, technology explosion, and increasing diversity. A nurse working in a physician's office prepares insurance forms in which the provider is given a fixed amount per enrollee of the health plan. What is the term for this type of reimbursement? a. Capitation b. Prospective payment system c. Bundled payment d. Rate setting - a. Capitation plans give providers a fixed amount per enrollee in the health plan in an effort to build a payment plan that consists of the best standards of care at the lowest cost. The prospective payment system groups inpatient hospital services for Medicare patients into DRGs. With bundled payments, providers receive a fixed sum of money to provide a range of services. Rate setting means that the government could set targets or caps for spending on health care services. A nurse works with families in crisis at a community mental health care facility. What is the best broad definition of a family? a. A father, a mother, and children b. A group whose members are biologically related c. A unit that includes aunts, uncles, and cousins d. A group of people who live together and depend on each other for support - d. Although all the responses may be true, the best definition is a group of people who live together and depend on each other for physical, emotional, or financial support. A nurse's neighbor tells the nurse, "I have a high temperature, feel awful, and I am not going to work." What stage of illness behavior is the neighbor exhibiting? a. Experiencing symptoms b. Assuming the sick role c. Assuming a dependent role d. Achieving recovery and rehabilitation - b. When people assume the sick role, they define themselves as ill, seek validation of this experience from others, and give up normal activities. In stage 1: experiencing symptoms, the first indication of an illness usually is recognizing one or more symptoms that are incompatible with one's personal definition of health. The stage of assuming a dependent role is characterized by the patient's decision to accept the diagnosis and follow the prescribed treatment plan. In the achieving recovery and rehabilitation role, the person gives up the dependent role and resumes normal activities and responsibilities. A nursing instructor is teaching students about the utilization of health care services and how the U.S. health care dollar is spent. Place the following care areas in order from the highest percentage of health care money spent to the lowest. a. Physician/clinical services b. Home health care c. Long-term care facility services d. Retail prescription drugs e. Government administration f. Hospital care - f, a, d, c, b, e. The national health expenditures in 2010 were hospital care 31%, physician/clinical services 20%, retail prescription drugs 10%, long-term care facility services 5%, home health care 3%, and government administration 1%. A visiting nurse performs a community assessment in an area of the city in which the nurse will be working. What is one element of a healthy community? a. Meets all the needs of its inhabitants b. Has mixed residential and industrial areas c. Offers access to health care services d. Has modern housing and condominiums - c.A healthy community offers access to health care services to treat illness and to promote health. A healthy community does not usually meet all the needs of its residents, but should be able to help with health issues such as nutrition, education, recreation, safety, and zoning regulations to separate residential sections from industrial ones. The age of housing is irrelevant as long as residences are maintained properly according to code. Despite a national focus on health promotion, nurses working with patients in inner-city clinics continue to see disparities in health care for vulnerable populations. Which patients would be considered vulnerable populations? Select all that apply. a. A White male diagnosed with HIV b. An African American teenager who is 6 months pregnant c. A Hispanic male who has type II diabetes d. A low-income family living in rural America e. A middle-class teacher living in a large city f. A White baby who was born with cerebral palsy - b, c, d, f. National trends in the prevention of health disparities are focused on vulnerable populations, such as racial and ethnic minorities, those living in poverty, women, children, older adults, rural and inner-city residents, and people with disabilities and special health care needs. Health promotion activities may occur on a primary, secondary, or tertiary level. Which activities are considered tertiary health promotion? Select all that apply

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