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MATERNAL-NEWBORN g g gg
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NURSING: v g
The Critical Components of Nursing Care
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3RD g g gEDITION
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BY DURHAMgg g|gg gCHAPMAN v v
,TESTBANK
,Maternal-Newborn Nursing: The Critical Components of Nursing3rd Care
v Edition Test Bank
Contents:
I. Maternity Nursing Overview
Chapter 1: Trends and Issues
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Chapter 2: Ethics and Standards of Practice Issues v
II. Antepartal Period
Chapter 3: Genetics, Conception, Fetal Development, and Reproductive Technology
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Chapter 4: Physiological Aspects of Antepartum Care
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Chapter 5: Psycho-Social-Cultural Aspects of the Antepartum Period
Chapter 6: Antepartal Tests
Chapter 7: High-Risk Antepartum Nursing Care v
III. Intrapartal Period
Chapter 8: Intrapartum Assessment and Interventions
Chapter 9: Fetal Heart Rate Assessment
Chapter 10: High-Risk Labor and Birth v
Chapter 11: Intrapartum and Postpartum Care of the Cesarean Birth Families
IV. Postpartal Period
Chapter 12: Postpartum Physiological Assessments and Nursing Care
Chapter 13: Transition to Parenthood
Chapter 14: High-Risk Postpartum Nursing Care v
V. Neonatal Period
Chapter 15: Physiological and Behavioral Responses of the Neonate
Chapter 16: Discharge Planning and Teaching
Chapter 17: High-Risk Neonatal Nursing Care v
, TEST BANK: Maternal-Newborn Nursing: The Critical Components Of Nursi3nrgd Care
Roberta Durham And Linda Chapman
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Unit 1: Maternity Nursing Overview
Chapter 1: Trends and Issues
Maternal-Newborn Nursing: The Critical Components of Nursing Care 3rd
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Edition Test MULTIPLE CHOICE
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1. The nurse is caring for a patient who is in labor with
v her first child. The
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patient’smother ispresent for support and notes that things have changed
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in the delivery room since she last gave birth in the early 1980s.
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Which current trend or intervention may the patient’s motherfind most
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different? v
1. Fetal monitoring throughout labor v v v
2. Postpartum stay of 10 days v
3. Expectant partner and family in operating room for cesarean birth v v
4. Hospital support for breastfeeding
ANS: 4
Chapter: Chapter 1 Trends and Issues
Chapter Learning Objective: 1. Discuss current trends v in the management
of laborand birth Page: 4
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Heading: Table 1-1: Past and Present
TrendsIntegrated Processes: Nursing
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Process
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Client Need: Health Promotion and v v
Maintenance Cognitive Level: Application
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[Applying] Concept: Evidence-Based
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Practice Difficulty: Moderate
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Feedback
1 This is incorrect. Fetal monitoring during labor began in the late
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1970s.As such, this likely would have occurred during the mother’s
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labor and
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delivery during the 1980s. v
2 This is incorrect. In the past, the average hospital postpartum stay
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wasv
10 days. Presently, the average postpartum stay is 48 hours or
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less. v
3 This is incorrect. In the past, expectant partners and families
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were excluded fromthe labor and birth experience. Present trends
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involve the expectant partner and family in the labor and birth
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experience, includingpresence in the operating
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room for cesarean births. v
4 This is correct. Hospital support for breastfeeding, including a lactation
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consultant and employment of the Baby-Friendly Hospital
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Initiative,
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were bothenacted during the early 1990s. v
PTS: 1 CON: Evidence-Based Practice v v
2. A patient with a history of hypertension is giving birth. During delivery, v v v v v
the staffwas notable to stabilize the patient’s blood pressure. As a
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