UWorld Medical-Surgical
Nursing.
,Basic Care & Comfort/Pain Management
Alzheimer's Disease – Eating Problems
Test Id: 52084841
Question Id: 32803 (729561)
8 of 20
A A A
The nurse is providing care for a client with Alzheimer disease who often becomes
angry and agitated 20 minutes or more after eating. The client accuses the nurse of not
providing food, saying, "I'm hungry. You didn't feed me." The nurse should take which
action?
Unordered Options Ordered Response
1. Give the client gentle reminders that the client has already eaten
2. Say that the client can have a snack in a couple of hours
Serve the client half of the meal initially and offer the other half
3. later
Take a picture of the client having a meal and show it when the
4. client becomes upset
You answered this question incorrectly.
Time Spent: 128 Seconds
39% of people answered this question correctly.
Last Updated: 11/6/2015
Explanation
,Most clients with Alzheimer disease experience eating and nutritional problems
throughout the course of their disease. During the earlier stages, it is common for
clients to forget that they have eaten recently. The best approach is for caregivers to
give clients something to eat when they say they are hungry. Smaller meals throughout
the day, along with low-calorie snacks, are effective strategies for clients who forget that
they have eaten.
(Option 1) Reality orientation has been recommended in the past as a way to deal with
confusion (eg, dementia, Alzheimer disease), but research has shown that it may cause
anxiety and distress. Validation therapy is a newer and more therapeutic approach that
validates and accepts the client's reality.
(Option 2) Offering to provide a snack later does not address the client's stated need to
eat now. Delay in giving food will only further increase the client's anger and frustration.
(Option 4) Showing a picture of the client having a meal is confrontational and will
have no meaning to the client.
, Educational objective:
Clients with Alzheimer disease experience eating and nutritional problems throughout
the course of the disease. During the earlier stages, it is common for them to forget that
they have eaten recently. The best approach is for caregivers to give clients something
to eat when they say they are hungry.
Cardiovascular
Abdominal Aneurysm Repair - Immediate Follow-Up
Test Id: 52050973
Question Id: 33389 (729561)
1 of 20
A A A
The nurse cares for a client who had an abdominal aortic aneurysm repair 6 hours ago.
Which assessment would require immediate follow-up?
Unordered Options Ordered Response
1. Abdomen is soft, nondistended, and tender to touch
2. Blood pressure is 96/66 mm Hg and apical pulse is 112/min
3. Client rates pain as 4 on a scale of 0-10
4. Green bile is draining from the nasogastric tube
You answered this question incorrectly.
Time Spent: 117 Seconds
77% of people answered this question correctly.
Last Updated: 10/26/2015
Nursing.
,Basic Care & Comfort/Pain Management
Alzheimer's Disease – Eating Problems
Test Id: 52084841
Question Id: 32803 (729561)
8 of 20
A A A
The nurse is providing care for a client with Alzheimer disease who often becomes
angry and agitated 20 minutes or more after eating. The client accuses the nurse of not
providing food, saying, "I'm hungry. You didn't feed me." The nurse should take which
action?
Unordered Options Ordered Response
1. Give the client gentle reminders that the client has already eaten
2. Say that the client can have a snack in a couple of hours
Serve the client half of the meal initially and offer the other half
3. later
Take a picture of the client having a meal and show it when the
4. client becomes upset
You answered this question incorrectly.
Time Spent: 128 Seconds
39% of people answered this question correctly.
Last Updated: 11/6/2015
Explanation
,Most clients with Alzheimer disease experience eating and nutritional problems
throughout the course of their disease. During the earlier stages, it is common for
clients to forget that they have eaten recently. The best approach is for caregivers to
give clients something to eat when they say they are hungry. Smaller meals throughout
the day, along with low-calorie snacks, are effective strategies for clients who forget that
they have eaten.
(Option 1) Reality orientation has been recommended in the past as a way to deal with
confusion (eg, dementia, Alzheimer disease), but research has shown that it may cause
anxiety and distress. Validation therapy is a newer and more therapeutic approach that
validates and accepts the client's reality.
(Option 2) Offering to provide a snack later does not address the client's stated need to
eat now. Delay in giving food will only further increase the client's anger and frustration.
(Option 4) Showing a picture of the client having a meal is confrontational and will
have no meaning to the client.
, Educational objective:
Clients with Alzheimer disease experience eating and nutritional problems throughout
the course of the disease. During the earlier stages, it is common for them to forget that
they have eaten recently. The best approach is for caregivers to give clients something
to eat when they say they are hungry.
Cardiovascular
Abdominal Aneurysm Repair - Immediate Follow-Up
Test Id: 52050973
Question Id: 33389 (729561)
1 of 20
A A A
The nurse cares for a client who had an abdominal aortic aneurysm repair 6 hours ago.
Which assessment would require immediate follow-up?
Unordered Options Ordered Response
1. Abdomen is soft, nondistended, and tender to touch
2. Blood pressure is 96/66 mm Hg and apical pulse is 112/min
3. Client rates pain as 4 on a scale of 0-10
4. Green bile is draining from the nasogastric tube
You answered this question incorrectly.
Time Spent: 117 Seconds
77% of people answered this question correctly.
Last Updated: 10/26/2015