Practical Guidelines for Nurses - 4th
edition richardson
written by
Sophiie
www.stuvia.com
Downloaded by: Sophiie |
Distribution of this document is illegal
, Stuvia.com - The Marketplace to Buy and Sell your Study Material
Test bank for
Pediatric Primary Care: Practical
Guidelines for Nurses - 4th edition
Downloaded by: Sophiie |
Distribution of this document is illegal
, Stuvia.com - The Marketplace to Buy and Sell your Study Material
Pediatric Primary Care 4th Edition Richardson
Testbank/StudyGuide
Chapter 1 Obtaining an Initial History
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. The nurse is seeing an adolescent and the parents in the clinic for the first time. Which should
the nurse do first?
a. Introduce him- or herself.
b. Make the family comfortable.
c. Give assurance of privacy.
d. Explain the purpose of the interview.
ANS: A
The first thing that nurses must do is to introduce themselves to the patient and family. Parents
and other adults should be addressed with appropriate titles unless they specify a preferred name.
Clarification of the purpose of the interview and the nurses role is the second thing that should be
done. During the initial part of the interview, the nurse should include general conversation to
help make the family feel at ease. The interview also should take place in an environment as free
of distraction as possible. In addition, the nurse should clarify which information will be shared
with other members of the health care team and any limits to the confidentiality.
2. Which is considered a block to effective communication?
a. Using silence
b. Using clichs
c. Directing the focus
d. Defining the problem
ANS: B
Using stereotyped comments or clichs can block effective communication. After the nurse uses
such trite phrases, parents often do not respond. Silence can be an effective interviewing tool.
Silence permits the interviewee to sort out thoughts and feelings and search for responses to
questions. To be effective, the nurse must be able to direct the focus of the interview while
allowing maximum freedom of expression. By using open-ended questions and guiding
questions, the nurse can obtain the necessary information and maintain a relationship with the
family. The nurse and parent must collaborate and define the problem that will be the focus of
the nursing intervention.
3. Which is the single most important factor to consider when communicating with children?
a. Presence of the childs parent
b. Childs physical condition
c. Childs developmental level
WWW.TESTBANKTANK.COM
Downloaded by: Sophiie |
Distribution of this document is illegal
, Stuvia.com - The Marketplace to Buy and Sell your Study Material
d. Childs nonverbal behaviors
ANS: C
The nurse must be aware of the childs developmental stage to engage in effective
communication. The use of both verbal and nonverbal communication should be appropriate to
the developmental level. Nonverbal behaviors vary in importance based on the childs
developmental level and physical condition. Although the childs physical condition is a
consideration, developmental level is much more important. The presence of parents is important
when communicating with young children but may be detrimental when speaking with
adolescents.
4. Because children younger than 5 years are egocentric, the nurse should do which when
communicating with them?
a. Focus communication on the child.
b. Use easy analogies when possible.
c. Explain experiences of others to the child.
d. Assure the child that communication is private.
ANS: A
Because children of this age are able to see things only in terms of themselves, the best approach
is to focus communication directly on them. Children should be provided with information about
what they can do and how they will feel. With children who are egocentric, analogies,
experiences, and assurances that communication is private will not be effective because the child
is not capable of understanding.
5. The nurses appr0ach when intr0ducing h0spital equipment t0 a presch00ler wh0 seems afraid
sh0uld be based 0n which principle?
a. The child may think the equipment is alive.
b. Explaining the equipment will 0nly increase the childs fear.
c. 0ne brief explanati0n will be en0ugh t0 reduce the childs fear.
d. The child is t00 y0ung t0 understand what the equipment d0es.
ANS: A
Y0ung children attribute human characteristics t0 inanimate 0bjects. They 0ften fear that the
0bjects may jump, bite, cut, 0r pinch all by themselves with0ut human directi0n. Equipment
sh0uld be kept 0ut 0f sight until needed. Simple, c0ncrete explanati0ns ab0ut what the equipment
d0es and h0w it will feel will help alleviate the childs fear. Presch00lers need repeated
explanati0ns as reassurance.
6. When the nurse interviews an ad0lescent, which is especially imp0rtant?
a. F0cus the discussi0n 0n the peer gr0up.
b. All0w an 0pp0rtunity t0 express feelings.
c. Use the same type 0f language as the ad0lescent.
d. Emphasize that c0nfidentiality will always be maintained.
ANS: B
Ad0lescents, like all children, need 0pp0rtunities t0 express their feelings. 0ften they interject
feelings int0 their w0rds. The nurse must be alert t0 the w0rds and feelings expressed. The nurse
WWW.TESTBANKTANK.C0M
Downloaded by: Sophiie |
Distribution of this document is illegal