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Test Bank Pediatric Nursing The Critical Components of Nursing Care 2nd Edition Rudd |Complete Guide A+

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Test Bank Pediatric Nursing The Critical
Components of Nursing Care 2nd Edition
Rudd |Complete Guide A+




1 — A 2-month-old infant presents with a bulging fontanelle, high fever, and irritability. Which
action should the nurse do first?​
A. Offer a cool bath​
B. Obtain blood cultures and start antibiotics​
C. Give acetaminophen per order​
D. Measure head circumference​
Answer: B — Suspected meningitis requires prompt cultures and empiric antibiotics after
appropriate specimens.

2 — The best indicator of fluid status in an infant is:​
A. Daily weights​
B. Skin turgor on the abdomen​
C. Number of wet diapers​
D. Fontanel condition​
Answer: A — Daily weight is the most accurate objective measure of fluid balance.

3 — A preschool child having surgery asks what to expect. The best nursing approach is to:​
A. Give a detailed anatomical explanation​
B. Use simple, concrete language and play demonstration​
C. Tell the child not to worry​
D. Ignore the question and talk to parents​
Answer: B — Preschoolers need simple, concrete explanations and play to understand.

4 — For a child with croup (viral laryngotracheobronchitis) presenting with inspiratory stridor and
mild retractions, the first-line intervention is:​
A. Oral corticosteroids and humidified air​
B. Nebulized epinephrine only​

, C. IV antibiotics​
D. Immediate intubation​
Answer: A — Humidified air and corticosteroids reduce airway inflammation; nebulized epi for
severe distress.

5 — A 7-year-old swallowed a button battery 30 minutes ago. The priority is:​
A. Observe at home for vomiting​
B. Bring child to ED for immediate removal​
C. Give milk to coat the esophagus​
D. Induce emesis​
Answer: B — Button batteries can rapidly cause tissue damage; immediate removal is
required.

6 — A child with congenital heart disease has clubbing of fingers. Clubbing occurs because of:​
A. Chronic hypoxemia causing increased vascular connective tissue​
B. Dehydration​
C. Iron deficiency anemia​
D. Excessive calcium intake​
Answer: A — Chronic hypoxemia leads to digital clubbing.

7 — Which developmental task is expected of a 15-month-old?​
A. Using two-word phrases​
B. Walking independently and beginning to run​
C. Tying shoelaces​
D. Riding a tricycle​
Answer: B — By ~12–18 months, most toddlers walk independently and begin to run.

8 — A child with suspected epiglottitis is sitting forward, drooling, and anxious. The nurse
should:​
A. Attempt throat culture​
B. Keep the child calm and prepare for emergent airway management​
C. Place in supine position for exam​
D. Offer a drink of water​
Answer: B — Epiglottitis can cause sudden airway obstruction; avoid upsetting the child and
prepare for airway.

9 — The safest place for an infant car seat is:​
A. Front passenger seat with airbags off​
B. Rear center seat, rear-facing for infants​
C. Rear-facing in any rear seat attached with lap belt only​
D. Booster seat as soon as the child is comfortable​
Answer: B — Rear center seat rear-facing is safest for infants.

10 — The nurse is teaching parents about ADHD and medication. An important side effect of
stimulant meds is:​

,A. Excessive sedation​
B. Appetite suppression and weight loss​
C. Hypoglycemia​
D. Bradycardia​
Answer: B — Stimulants commonly cause decreased appetite and weight loss.

11 — A neonate with persistent hypoglycemia is at risk for:​
A. Hyperactivity later in life​
B. Seizures and neurodevelopmental impairment​
C. Increased height as a toddler​
D. Improved feeding skills​
Answer: B — Prolonged neonatal hypoglycemia can cause seizures and brain injury.

12 — A child with acute asthma exacerbation has an SpO₂ of 88%. The nurse should:​
A. Administer humidified oxygen and monitor​
B. Start antibiotics​
C. Place in Trendelenburg position​
D. Give oral steroids only​
Answer: A — Hypoxemia requires oxygen; bronchodilators and steroids also indicated.

13 — Which vaccine is contraindicated for immunocompromised children?​
A. Inactivated influenza vaccine​
B. MMR (live) vaccine when severely immunocompromised​
C. Hepatitis B vaccine​
D. DTaP vaccine​
Answer: B — Live vaccines like MMR are contraindicated in severe immunosuppression.

14 — The priority nursing assessment for a child with dehydration is:​
A. Capillary refill and heart rate​
B. Level of play activity​
C. Height measurement​
D. Sleep patterns​
Answer: A — Vital signs and perfusion (heart rate, cap refill) indicate dehydration severity.

15 — A toddler refuses to take oral antibiotics. Best strategy:​
A. Force medication into mouth​
B. Mix with small amount of favorite food or use flavored formulation​
C. Stop medication and wait​
D. Give double dose next time​
Answer: B — Mixing with small appealing carrier or using flavored meds improves compliance.

16 — A child with nephrotic syndrome is at increased risk for:​
A. Hypoalbuminemia and edema​
B. Hypertension from hypervolemia only​
C. Hypercalcemia​

, D. Elevated hemoglobin​
Answer: A — Nephrotic syndrome causes protein loss leading to hypoalbuminemia and
edema.

17 — A 10-year-old has a temperature of 39.4°C and generalized tonic-clonic seizure lasting 3
minutes — postictal but stable. The priority nursing action:​
A. Administer rectal diazepam immediately​
B. Monitor airway and oxygenation and place on side​
C. Insert oral airway while seizing​
D. Give a cold sponge bath​
Answer: B — After a seizure, airway and oxygenation are priorities; benzodiazepines during
prolonged seizure.

18 — The correct technique for measuring a tympanic temperature in a 2-year-old:​
A. Pull pinna down and back and insert probe gently​
B. Pull pinna up and back​
C. Use oral thermometer​
D. Tympanic not appropriate for toddlers​
Answer: A — For children under 3, pull pinna down and back.

19 — A child with hemophilia presents with a joint bleed. Initial nursing care should include:​
A. Apply heat and massage joint​
B. RICE: Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation and administer factor concentrate​
C. Encourage active range-of-motion​
D. Give high-dose aspirin​
Answer: B — RICE and factor replacement are appropriate; avoid NSAIDs like aspirin.

20 — A 4-year-old with suspected appendicitis is lying supine, quiet, with minimal movement.
The nurse recognizes this as:​
A. Normal play behavior​
B. A sign of peritoneal irritation and possible appendicitis​
C. A sign of viral gastroenteritis​
D. Anxiety only​
Answer: B — Stillness often indicates abdominal pain/peritonitis in children.

21 — For a child receiving ototoxic medication (e.g., aminoglycoside), the nurse should monitor:​
A. Renal function and hearing tests (audiology)​
B. Blood glucose only​
C. Blood pressure​
D. Visual acuity​
Answer: A — Monitor renal labs and hearing because aminoglycosides are ototoxic and
nephrotoxic.

22 — Best position for a child after tonsillectomy to prevent aspiration is:​
A. Prone​
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