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Exam (elaborations)

Jarvis Health Assessment 9e Test Bank | Nursing Physical Examination NCLEX-Style Questions

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Master physical examination and health assessment with this comprehensive, exam-focused test bank aligned to Physical Examination and Health Assessment, 9th Edition by Carolyn Jarvis and Ann L. Eckhardt—the gold-standard text in nursing assessment education. Designed for high-performance learning, this digital resource delivers full textbook coverage across all units and chapters, reinforcing clinical judgment, documentation accuracy, and patient safety. Each chapter includes 20 NCLEX-style multiple-choice questions with correct answers and detailed, evidence-based rationales, ensuring concept mastery and readiness for exams, OSCEs, and clinical skills validation. Questions integrate clinical reasoning and realistic assessment scenarios to strengthen head-to-toe examination skills, system-based assessment, and recognition of normal versus abnormal findings—across diverse patient populations. This test bank is ideal for time-efficient, skill-based preparation. It supports accurate data collection, prioritization, and interpretation—key competencies for safe, confident patient evaluation in academic and clinical settings. Key Features: Full-chapter coverage of Jarvis & Eckhardt, 9th Edition 20 clinically accurate NCLEX-style MCQs per chapter In-depth rationales grounded in current nursing standards Scenarios covering health history, head-to-toe and system assessments Emphasis on cultural considerations, patient safety, and documentation Digital format for flexible, on-demand study Ideal For: Undergraduate Nursing (BSN, ADN) Health Assessment and Physical Examination courses Clinical skills labs and OSCE preparation NCLEX-RN review and early APRN foundations Build confidence, sharpen assessment accuracy, and prepare for real-world practice with a test bank trusted by nursing students and educators. Keywords: physical examination and health assessment test bank Jarvis and Eckhardt test bank health assessment nursing MCQs physical assessment test bank NCLEX-style assessment questions clinical skills nursing study guide head-to-toe assessment questions health assessment exam prep Hashtags: #HealthAssessmentTestBank #PhysicalExaminationNursing #JarvisEckhardt #NCLEXAssessment #NursingClinicalSkills #PhysicalAssessmentMCQs #OSCEPreparation #NursingEducationResources #HealthAssessmentStudyGuide #NCLEXRNPrep

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Uploaded on
December 20, 2025
Number of pages
981
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

  • nclexrnprep
  • ncle

Content preview

PHYSICAL EXAMINATION AND HEALTH
ASSESSMENT
9TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)CAROLYN JARVIS; ANN L.
ECKHARDT


TEST BANK

1
Reference: Ch. 1 — Evidence-Based Assessment — Clinical
Decision-Making & Levels of Evidence
Stem: A 55-year-old woman presents for an annual exam and
asks whether the clinician should order an imaging study she
read about online. Her history is noncontributory and physical
exam is normal. You must decide whether to order the test
now. Which approach best follows Jarvis’ evidence-based
assessment framework for deciding on a screening or diagnostic
test in an asymptomatic patient?



Page 1 of 981

,A. Order the imaging because a negative exam doesn't exclude
subclinical disease, and patient preference drives screening.
B. Defer testing and use population-based screening guidelines
and evidence hierarchy to assess benefit versus harm first.
C. Order the imaging only if the test is low cost and low risk,
since harm is minimal.
D. Refer immediately for specialist testing because imaging is
more sensitive than clinical examination.
Correct Answer: B
Rationales:
Correct (B): Jarvis emphasizes using evidence hierarchies and
guideline-based screening thresholds to weigh benefits and
harms before testing. For asymptomatic patients, clinicians
should appraise population-level evidence and pretest
probability to avoid unnecessary tests and harms. This
approach supports safe, cost-effective practice and clinical
judgment.
A: Patient preference is important but should not override
evidence when screening yields net harm or uncertain benefit;
Jarvis stresses shared decision-making guided by evidence, not
preference alone.
C: Low cost/low risk alone does not justify screening unless
evidence demonstrates net benefit; Jarvis warns against “just
because” testing.
D: Referral/testing because of perceived sensitivity ignores


Page 2 of 981

,pretest probability and guideline recommendations—Jarvis
prioritizes evidence before escalation.
Teaching point: Use guideline-based evidence and pretest
probability before ordering screening tests.
Citation: Jarvis, C., & Eckhardt, A. L. (2023). Physical
Examination and Health Assessment (9th ed.). Ch. 1.


2
Reference: Ch. 1 — Evidence-Based Assessment — Validity &
Reliability of Assessment Tools
Stem: You are evaluating a new pain-assessment tool for use in
your clinic. The tool produces consistent scores when repeated,
but scores do not correlate well with patients’ reported pain
scores. According to Jarvis, how should you interpret these
psychometric findings?
A. The tool is both valid and reliable; adopt it because
repeatability is most important.
B. The tool is reliable but lacks validity; do not rely on it as the
sole pain measure.
C. The tool is invalid but reliable; however, validity is not
necessary if staff prefer it.
D. The tool should be discarded because reliability without
validity is impossible.
Correct Answer: B

Page 3 of 981

, Rationales:
Correct (B): Jarvis distinguishes reliability (consistency) from
validity (measuring what it intends). A tool can be reliable yet
not valid; therefore it should not be used as the sole measure
for clinical decisions about pain.
A: Repeatability alone does not ensure the tool measures true
pain (validity). Jarvis advises both properties are needed.
C: Validity is essential for clinical decisions; staff preference
cannot replace evidence of validity per Jarvis’ framework.
D: Reliability without validity is possible and meaningful to
recognize; discarding without further evaluation is not
warranted.
Teaching point: Reliability ≠ validity; both are required for
clinical decision making.
Citation: Jarvis, C., & Eckhardt, A. L. (2023). Physical
Examination and Health Assessment (9th ed.). Ch. 1.


3
Reference: Ch. 1 — Evidence-Based Assessment — Clinical
Practice Guidelines & Shared Decision-Making
Stem: A 46-year-old man with a family history of colorectal
cancer asks about earlier colonoscopy. He is asymptomatic and
has average health otherwise. Using Jarvis’ recommendations,
which next step aligns best with evidence-based, patient-
centered assessment?
Page 4 of 981
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