Escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Leer en línea o como PDF ¿Documento equivocado? Cámbialo gratis 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Examen

NUR 101/ NUR101 Exam 4 – Health Assessment Review ACTUAL EXAM 2026/2027 | Health Assessment Review | Verified Q&A | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded

Puntuación
-
Vendido
-
Páginas
41
Grado
A+
Subido en
12-06-2026
Escrito en
2025/2026

Pass your cumulative health assessment exam with this 2026/2027 complete actual exam for NUR 101 Exam 4 – Health Assessment Review at Fortis. This 100% verified Q&A set covers comprehensive assessment synthesis, diagnostic reasoning and clinical decision-making, documentation and reporting of findings, integration of data into care planning, and competency evaluation across the lifespan. Each answer includes a detailed rationale to solidify clinical judgment. Backed by our Pass Guarantee. Download now.

Mostrar más Leer menos
Institución
NUR 101/ NUR101
Grado
NUR 101/ NUR101

Vista previa del contenido

​ UR 101/ NUR101 Exam 4 – Health​
N
​Assessment Review ACTUAL EXAM​
​2026/2027 | Health Assessment Review |​
​Verified Q&A | Pass Guaranteed - A+​
​Graded​

​ ART A – MULTIPLE CHOICE (Q1‑60)​
P
​Q1 (Clinical reasoning – diagnostic test selection): A 58-year-old male presents with sudden​
​onset dyspnea, pleuritic chest pain, and tachycardia. He recently had knee replacement surgery​
​5 days ago. The nurse practitioner uses the Wells score to assess pre-test probability. Which​
​Wells criterion carries the HIGHEST point value?​
​A. Clinical signs of DVT (3 points)​
​B. Alternative diagnosis less likely than PE (3 points)​
​C. Heart rate >100 bpm (1.5 points)​
​D. Immobilization or surgery within 4 weeks (1.5 points)​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: The Wells score for PE assigns 3 points to "alternative diagnosis less likely than PE,"​
​which is the highest-weighted criterion, reflecting its strong discriminatory value in clinical​
​reasoning. Option A (clinical signs of DVT) also carries 3 points, but "alternative diagnosis less​
​likely" is the most critical clinical judgment point and is often emphasized in teaching. Option C​
​(tachycardia) and D (immobilization) carry only 1.5 points each.​
​Clinical pearl: When Wells score is >4 (high probability), imaging (CT pulmonary angiography) is​
​indicated without waiting for D-dimer results.​
​Q2 (Special populations – bariatric assessment): A nurse is preparing to obtain vital signs on a​
​patient with BMI 48. Which action is MOST appropriate for accurate blood pressure​
​measurement?​
​A. Use a standard adult cuff on the forearm if the upper arm is too large​
​B. Use a thigh cuff on the upper arm to ensure complete encirclement​
​C. Use a large adult cuff (15 cm width) regardless of arm circumference​
​D. Use a wrist blood pressure monitor for consistency​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: For patients with large upper arms (>33 cm circumference), a thigh cuff (18 cm width)​
​should be used on the upper arm to ensure the bladder encircles at least 80% of the arm​
​circumference, per AHA guidelines. Option A (forearm measurement) produces falsely elevated​
​readings due to increased vascular resistance distal to the brachial artery. Option C (standard​

,l​arge adult cuff) is insufficient for arms >33 cm. Option D (wrist monitors) are less accurate and​
​should be avoided in bariatric patients.​
​Clinical pearl: Always measure arm circumference before selecting a cuff; using an undersized​
​cuff can overestimate BP by 10-30 mmHg.​
​Q3 (Mental health assessment – suicide risk): A 24-year-old college student is brought to the​
​clinic by a roommate who found a note mentioning "ending it all." Using the C-SSRS screening​
​tool, which question assesses the CRITICAL distinction between passive ideation and active​
​suicidal intent?​
​A. "Have you wished you were dead or wished you could go to sleep and not wake up?"​
​B. "Have you had these thoughts and had some intention of acting on them?"​
​C. "Have you been thinking about how you might do this?"​
​D. "Have you done anything to end your life?"​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: The C-SSRS distinguishes passive suicidal ideation (wishing to be dead) from active​
​suicidal intent by asking whether the patient has intention to act on thoughts, which is the critical​
​threshold for immediate safety intervention. Option A assesses passive ideation only. Option C​
​assesses suicidal planning (means/method) but not necessarily intent. Option D assesses past​
​suicide attempts.​
​Clinical pearl: Intent to act (not just ideation or planning) is the strongest predictor of imminent​
​suicide risk and requires immediate psychiatric evaluation and safety planning.​
​Q4 (Substance use assessment): A nurse is screening a patient for alcohol use disorder using​
​the AUDIT-C. Which response pattern would yield the HIGHEST possible score, indicating the​
​greatest concern?​
​A. Drinking 4+ times weekly, 5+ drinks per occasion, unable to cut down​
​B. Drinking 2-3 times monthly, 3-4 drinks per occasion, felt guilty​
​C. Drinking 2-4 times monthly, 2-3 drinks per occasion, needed eye-opener​
​D. Drinking 2-3 times weekly, 5-6 drinks per occasion, injured someone​
​[CORRECT] A​
​Rationale: The AUDIT-C scores frequency (0-4 points), quantity (0-4 points), and binge​
​drinking/inability to cut down (0-4 points), with a maximum of 12 points; option A describes the​
​highest frequency (4+ times = 4 points), highest quantity (5+ drinks = 4 points), and inability to​
​cut down (4 points) = 12 points total. Option D describes high quantity but lower frequency.​
​Options B and C describe lower overall patterns.​
​Clinical pearl: An AUDIT-C score ≥4 in men or ≥3 in women indicates unhealthy alcohol use​
​requiring brief intervention; scores ≥8 suggest alcohol use disorder requiring formal evaluation.​
​Q5 (Environmental/occupational health): A nurse in an occupational health clinic is assessing a​
​45-year-old construction worker who reports chronic cough, dyspnea on exertion, and chest​
​tightness. He has worked in demolition for 20 years. Which exposure is MOST likely​
​responsible?​
​A. Silica dust from concrete cutting​
​B. Lead paint from older buildings​
​C. Carbon monoxide from gasoline-powered equipment​
​D. Mold from water-damaged structures​
​[CORRECT] A​

,​ ationale: Chronic silica exposure in construction/demolition causes silicosis, presenting with​
R
​progressive dyspnea, cough, and restrictive lung disease; silica is classified as a human​
​carcinogen by IARC. Option B (lead) primarily causes neurological and hematologic effects, not​
​chronic respiratory symptoms. Option C (carbon monoxide) causes acute poisoning, not chronic​
​cough. Option D (mold) can cause allergic reactions but is less likely to produce progressive​
​restrictive lung disease in this occupational context.​
​Clinical pearl: OSHA requires silica exposure monitoring and respiratory protection; workers​
​with >10 years of silica exposure should receive periodic chest X-rays.​
​Q6 (Genetic and genomic assessment): A nurse is constructing a three-generation pedigree for​
​a patient whose father has Huntington disease and whose mother is unaffected. What is the​
​probability that this patient has inherited the Huntington gene?​
​A. 25%​
​B. 50%​
​C. 75%​
​D. 100%​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Huntington disease is an autosomal dominant disorder; an affected parent has a 50%​
​chance of transmitting the mutated gene to each offspring, regardless of the unaffected parent's​
​status. Option A (25%) would apply to autosomal recessive inheritance with two carrier parents.​
​Option C (75%) has no basis in Mendelian inheritance. Option D (100%) would only apply if​
​both parents were affected.​
​Clinical pearl: Autosomal dominant conditions show vertical transmission (affected individuals in​
​every generation), and genetic counseling is essential before predictive testing due to​
​psychological implications of knowing one's status.​
​Q7 (LGBTQ+ health assessment): A nurse is conducting a sexual history with a transgender​
​man (female-to-male) who has not undergone bottom surgery. Which question is MOST​
​inclusive and clinically relevant for STI screening?​
​A. "Do you have sex with men, women, or both?"​
​B. "What anatomy do you have that you use for sexual activity?"​
​C. "When was your last menstrual period?"​
​D. "Are you taking testosterone for transition?"​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Asking about anatomy used for sexual activity is the most inclusive approach that​
​captures actual sexual practices and exposure risks without making assumptions about gender​
​identity or surgical status, per WPATH standards. Option A focuses on partner gender but may​
​miss anatomical risk factors. Option C assumes retained uterine function and may be​
​dysphoria-triggering. Option D, while relevant to overall health, does not directly inform STI​
​screening needs.​
​Clinical pearl: Use anatomically inclusive language (e.g., "front hole" or "genitals" as patient​
​prefers) and screen based on anatomy present, not gender identity alone.​
​Q8 (Clinical reasoning – cognitive bias): A nurse practitioner evaluates a 62-year-old with chest​
​pain and immediately attributes it to GERD because the patient had GERD documented three​
​years ago. The NP fails to order an ECG. Which cognitive bias is demonstrated?​
​A. Anchoring bias​

, ​ . Premature closure​
B
​C. Confirmation bias​
​D. Availability heuristic​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Premature closure occurs when a clinician accepts a diagnosis before it has been​
​fully verified, stopping the diagnostic process prematurely; attributing chest pain to GERD​
​without ruling out cardiac causes exemplifies this dangerous error. Option A (anchoring)​
​involves over-relying on the first piece of information. Option C (confirmation bias) involves​
​seeking evidence to support a preconceived notion. Option D (availability heuristic) involves​
​judging probability based on recent memorable cases.​
​Clinical pearl: Chest pain in patients over 40 requires cardiac workup (ECG, troponins)​
​regardless of prior GERD diagnosis—always rule out life-threatening causes before accepting​
​benign explanations.​
​Q9 (Veterans health assessment): A nurse is screening a 34-year-old Iraq veteran for PTSD​
​using the PC-PTSD-5. Which symptom cluster is NOT included in this validated screening tool?​
​A. Re-experiencing (nightmares, flashbacks)​
​B. Avoidance (avoiding reminders)​
​C. Negative alterations in cognition/mood​
​D. Hyperarousal (hypervigilance, startle response)​
​[CORRECT] C​
​Rationale: The PC-PTSD-5 screens for re-experiencing, avoidance, hyperarousal, and numbing​
​(4 clusters), but does NOT include the DSM-5 "negative alterations in cognition and mood"​
​cluster, which requires more detailed clinical assessment. Options A, B, and D are all included​
​in the PC-PTSD-5.​
​Clinical pearl: A positive screen on PC-PTSD-5 (≥3 "yes" answers) requires referral for​
​comprehensive PTSD evaluation; veterans with burn pit exposure should also be screened for​
​respiratory conditions per 2022 PACT Act.​
​Q10 (Nutritional assessment – eating disorders): A nurse is assessing a 19-year-old female with​
​BMI 16.5 who reports restricting intake to 800 calories daily and exercising 3 hours daily. Which​
​finding is MOST concerning for imminent refeeding syndrome risk?​
​A. Serum potassium 3.2 mEq/L​
​B. Serum phosphorus 2.8 mg/dL​
​C. Recent weight loss of 15% in 3 months​
​D. Bradycardia (HR 48 bpm)​
​[CORRECT] B​
​Rationale: Hypophosphatemia (phosphorus <2.5 mg/dL) is the hallmark and most dangerous​
​manifestation of refeeding syndrome, which can cause cardiac failure, respiratory failure, and​
​death; a level of 2.8 mg/dL indicates depletion and high risk. Option A (hypokalemia) also​
​occurs but is less specific. Option C (rapid weight loss) is a risk factor but not an active​
​metabolic derangement. Option D (bradycardia) reflects starvation adaptation.​
​Clinical pearl: Before refeeding malnourished patients, check and replete phosphorus,​
​potassium, and magnesium; start nutrition at 10-20 kcal/kg and advance slowly with daily​
​electrolyte monitoring.​

Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
NUR 101/ NUR101
Grado
NUR 101/ NUR101

Información del documento

Subido en
12 de junio de 2026
Número de páginas
41
Escrito en
2025/2026
Tipo
Examen
Contiene
Preguntas y respuestas

Temas

$10.49
Accede al documento completo:

¿Documento equivocado? Cámbialo gratis Dentro de los 14 días posteriores a la compra y antes de descargarlo, puedes elegir otro documento. Puedes gastar el importe de nuevo.
Escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron
Inmediatamente disponible después del pago
Leer en línea o como PDF

Conoce al vendedor
Seller avatar
oketchnyasakwa

Documento también disponible en un lote

Conoce al vendedor

Seller avatar
oketchnyasakwa Chamberlain College Of Nursing
Seguir Necesitas iniciar sesión para seguir a otros usuarios o asignaturas
Vendido
3
Miembro desde
4 meses
Número de seguidores
0
Documentos
374
Última venta
3 días hace

0.0

0 reseñas

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Por qué los estudiantes eligen Stuvia

Creado por compañeros estudiantes, verificado por reseñas

Calidad en la que puedes confiar: escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron y evaluado por otros que han usado estos resúmenes.

¿No estás satisfecho? Elige otro documento

¡No te preocupes! Puedes elegir directamente otro documento que se ajuste mejor a lo que buscas.

Paga como quieras, empieza a estudiar al instante

Sin suscripción, sin compromisos. Paga como estés acostumbrado con tarjeta de crédito y descarga tu documento PDF inmediatamente.

Student with book image

“Comprado, descargado y aprobado. Así de fácil puede ser.”

Alisha Student

Preguntas frecuentes