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Health Assessment for Nursing Test Bank | Jarvis & Eckhardt 9th Ed | NCLEX-Focused MCQs

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Physical Examination & Health Assessment Test Bank 9e | Jarvis & Eckhardt | NCLEX-Style Physical Assessment MCQs Description: Master comprehensive health assessment with this high-yield Physical Examination and Health Assessment Test Bank (9th Edition) aligned to the gold-standard text by Carolyn Jarvis and Ann L. Eckhardt. Designed for nursing students and early advanced practice learners, this digital study resource delivers full chapter coverage with 20 NCLEX-style multiple-choice questions per chapter, each supported by clear, evidence-based rationales that strengthen clinical reasoning and exam readiness. Built to reinforce real-world practice, this test bank emphasizes head-to-toe physical examination, system-based assessment, and accurate recognition of normal vs. abnormal findings—critical skills for OSCEs, skills labs, and patient care. Questions integrate cultural considerations, patient safety, documentation standards, and prioritization to mirror clinical decision-making you will face in coursework and on the NCLEX-RN. What’s included: Complete coverage of all units and chapters from Jarvis & Eckhardt, 9th Edition 20 clinically accurate MCQs per chapter written in NCLEX style Detailed rationales grounded in current nursing assessment principles Scenarios targeting health history, physical examination, and clinical judgment Focus on documentation accuracy, safety, and prioritization Why students choose this resource: Saves time with targeted, exam-relevant practice Reinforces foundational and advanced assessment concepts Improves confidence and accuracy in patient evaluation Strengthens readiness for Health Assessment exams, OSCEs, and NCLEX-RN Ideal for: BSN and ADN programs, Health Assessment and Physical Examination courses, clinical skills labs, NCLEX preparation, and early APRN assessment foundations. Keywords: physical assessment test bank Jarvis and Eckhardt test bank health assessment nursing MCQs physical examination MCQs NCLEX health assessment questions clinical skills nursing study guide health assessment exam prep nursing physical assessment practice Hashtags: #PhysicalAssessmentTestBank #HealthAssessmentNursing #JarvisEckhardt #NCLEXAssessment #NursingClinicalSkills #PhysicalExamination #NursingStudyResources #HealthAssessmentMCQs #OSCEPrep #NursingEducation

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Uploaded on
December 20, 2025
Number of pages
982
Written in
2025/2026
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PHYSICAL EXAMINATION AND HEALTH
ASSESSMENT
9TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)CAROLYN JARVIS; ANN L.
ECKHARDT


TEST BANK

1)
Reference: Ch. 1 — Evidence-Based Assessment — Genetics
and Environment
Stem: A 29-year-old woman comes for a preconception visit.
She reports a family history of cystic fibrosis in a nephew and
says she is “not sure” whether she or her partner were ever
tested. Her records show no previous genetic screening. Vital
signs and exam are normal. Which action most aligns with an
evidence-based, safety-focused approach?
A. Reassure the couple because absence of personal disease
makes carrier status unlikely.

Page 1 of 982

,B. Offer carrier screening for both partners and provide
counseling about reproductive options.
C. Recommend prenatal ultrasound only if pregnancy occurs;
screening is unnecessary preconception.
D. Order a sweat chloride test on the woman to rule out cystic
fibrosis carrier status.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale — Correct (B): Jarvis emphasizes family history and
targeted genetic screening as vital components of risk
assessment. Carrier screening for both partners identifies
reproductive risk (autosomal recessive disease) and supports
informed decision-making and safety planning. Preconception
screening is evidence-based to allow options before pregnancy.
Rationale — Incorrect (A): Personal absence of disease doesn’t
exclude carrier status for autosomal recessive disorders; family
history increases risk.
Rationale — Incorrect (C): Waiting until pregnancy delays
reproductive options and reduces counseling opportunities;
preconception testing is recommended.
Rationale — Incorrect (D): Sweat chloride tests diagnose
affected individuals, not carriers; carrier screening uses genetic
testing, not diagnostic sweat testing.
Teaching point: Family history guides targeted carrier screening
before conception.



Page 2 of 982

,Citation: Jarvis, C., & Eckhardt, A. L. (2023). Physical
Examination and Health Assessment (9th ed.). Ch. 1.


2)
Reference: Ch. 1 — Evidence-Based Assessment — Genetics
and Environment
Stem: A 52-year-old man reports his mother had “heart
disease” at age 54 and his younger sister had a myocardial
infarction at 47. He smokes one pack/day and has untreated
hypertension. On examination his BP is 158/96 mmHg. Which
assessment finding or action most increases diagnostic clarity
and safety?
A. Document “family history of heart disease” and advise
lifestyle change only.
B. Elicit a three-generation pedigree and calculate his familial
cardiovascular risk.
C. Assume increased risk is solely due to his smoking and treat
hypertension only.
D. Order a routine chest x-ray to evaluate hereditary heart
disease risk.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale — Correct (B): Jarvis frames family history collected
as a pedigree (three-generation) as a “vital sign” that clarifies
inheritance patterns and familial risk. Combining pedigree with

Page 3 of 982

, modifiable risks (smoking, HTN) enables targeted prevention
and safety interventions.
Rationale — Incorrect (A): Vague documentation misses
inheritance pattern and underestimates genetic contribution;
advising lifestyle alone is incomplete.
Rationale — Incorrect (C): Smoking is important but does not
explain early-onset events in relatives; neglecting family history
risks missed high familial risk.
Rationale — Incorrect (D): Chest x-ray is not useful for assessing
hereditary cardiovascular risk; focused risk stratification and
testing (lipid profile, ECG) are appropriate.
Teaching point: Use a three-generation pedigree to quantify
familial cardiovascular risk.
Citation: Jarvis, C., & Eckhardt, A. L. (2023). Physical
Examination and Health Assessment (9th ed.). Ch. 1.


3)
Reference: Ch. 1 — Evidence-Based Assessment — Genetics
and Environment
Stem: A 40-year-old construction worker reports progressive
dyspnea and chronic cough. He mentions prolonged workplace
exposure to asbestos 20 years ago and a father who died of
lung cancer. Which interpretation most accurately prioritizes
immediate safety and next steps?

Page 4 of 982
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