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Burns’ Pediatric Primary Care 8th Ed — Complete Test Bank (20 MCQs/Chapter) | Pediatric Nursing & PNP Exam Prep

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Burns’ Pediatric Primary Care 8th Ed — Complete Test Bank (20 MCQs/Chapter) | Pediatric Nursing & PNP Exam Prep Description: Master pediatric primary care with the only comprehensive, chapter-by-chapter test bank built specifically for Burns’ Pediatric Primary Care, 8th Edition. Designed for PNPs, FNPs, DNP students, NCLEX candidates, and advanced practice nurses, this digital bundle delivers targeted practice that converts knowledge into clinical confidence and higher exam scores. Save study time with evidence-based, clinically realistic items that mirror the cognitive level and decision-making tested on board and certification exams. Key benefits: faster study cycles, stronger critical-thinking, and measurable performance gains—every question includes a correct answer plus expert-verified rationale to cement understanding and clinical reasoning. With FULL textbook coverage (ALL chapters) and 20 MCQs per chapter, you get consistent, predictable practice volume to plan study blocks and simulate exam-style pacing. Features: Complete coverage: all chapters from Burns’ Pediatric Primary Care, 8th Ed. 20 NCLEX/HESI-style multiple-choice questions per chapter Correct answer and expert-verified rationale for every item Application- and analysis-level items emphasizing clinical decision-making Downloadable digital format for instant access and offline study Instructor notes and suggested study plan template Trusted resource: aligned to the authoritative Burns textbook—widely regarded as the gold standard in pediatric primary care—this test bank is ideal for students, educators, and clinical programs seeking rigorous, exam-focused preparation. Keywords: Burns Pediatric Primary Care test bank pediatric nursing MCQs PNP exam prep questions Burns 8th edition practice questions NCLEX pediatric test bank pediatric primary care questions advanced practice nursing MCQs HESI pediatric practice Hashtags: #BurnsPediatricPrimaryCare #PediatricNursing #PNPPrep #FNPPrep #NCLEXPrep #PediatricMCQs #TestBank #ClinicalReasoning #NursingEducation #AdvancedPracticeNurse

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Uploaded on
November 3, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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BURNS' PEDIATRIC PRIMARY CARE
8TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)DAWN LEE GARZON, MARY
DIRKS, MARTHA DRIESSNACK, KAREN G.
DUDERSTADT, NAN M. GAYLORD




TEST BANK

1)
Reference: Ch. 1 — Pediatric Primary Care — Primary Care
Versus Primary Prevention
Question Stem: A 2-year-old child presents for a well visit. The
caregiver asks whether immunizations are considered "primary
care" or "primary prevention." Which explanation best
distinguishes primary care from primary prevention for this
family?
Options:
A. "Primary care equals immunizations; primary prevention is

,only for community sanitation."
B. "Primary care is longitudinal, comprehensive care for your
child; primary prevention are specific actions like vaccines."
C. "Primary prevention involves diagnosis and treatment;
primary care is population-level policy."
D. "They are identical—both mean the same thing in pediatric
health."
Correct Answer: B
Rationales:
• Correct (B): Primary care is comprehensive, continuous,
and family-centered longitudinal care; primary prevention
includes discrete interventions (e.g., vaccines) to prevent
disease.
• Incorrect (A): Implies primary care is limited to vaccines
and minimizes the broader scope of primary care.
• Incorrect (C): Reverses definitions—diagnosis/treatment
fall under primary care not primary prevention.
• Incorrect (D): Incorrect—terms have distinct meanings in
public health and clinical practice.
Teaching Point: Primary care = continuous, comprehensive
family care; primary prevention = targeted disease-
preventing actions.
Citation (APA): Garzon et al. (2023). Burns’ Pediatric
Primary Care (8th Ed.). Ch. 1.

,2)
Reference: Ch. 1 — Pediatric Primary Care — Pediatric Primary
Care Providers
Question Stem: A parent asks whether the pediatric nurse
practitioner (PNP) or a family physician is better to manage
their medically complex 7-year-old with asthma and eczema.
Which response best reflects interdisciplinary primary care
roles?
Options:
A. "Only pediatricians should manage complex children; PNPs
and family physicians cannot."
B. "Either can lead care; choose a provider experienced in
pediatric chronic care and coordinated referrals."
C. "Family physicians are always better because they treat
adults too."
D. "Select a specialist and avoid primary care for chronic
conditions."
Correct Answer: B
Rationales:
• Correct (B): Best practice emphasizes selecting primary
care clinicians with pediatric chronic-care experience who
coordinate specialty care and family support.
• Incorrect (A): Incorrect and exclusionary; PNPs and family
physicians often manage complex pediatric patients.

, • Incorrect (C): Family physicians’ adult scope doesn’t
automatically make them superior for pediatric chronic
conditions.
• Incorrect (D): Primary care remains central for
coordination; excluding it reduces continuity and family
support.
Teaching Point: Choose a primary care clinician
experienced in pediatric chronic care and care
coordination.
Citation (APA): Garzon et al. (2023). Burns’ Pediatric
Primary Care (8th Ed.). Ch. 1.


3)
Reference: Ch. 1 — Pediatric Primary Care — Unique Issues in
Pediatrics
Question Stem: During a newborn visit the parent reports
limited sleep and concerns about bonding. Which pediatric-
specific factor should the clinician prioritize when planning
interventions?
Options:
A. Immediate referral to adult psychiatry for the parent.
B. Screening for postpartum depression, assessing parent-infant
interaction, and offering anticipatory guidance.
C. Prescribing sedatives for the infant to improve parental sleep.
D. Advising the parent to wait 6 months—no action now.
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