1. A 78-year-old patient diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease picks up a glass from the
bedside table but does not recognize the purpose of the object. This inability is
associated with which characteristic of the disorder?
A) Apraxia
B) Anergia
C) Aphagia
D) Agnosia
A nurse is sitting in the day room at an acute care mental health facility with a group of
clients who are watching television. Suddenly one of the clients jumps up screaming and
runs out of the room. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?
A) Follow the client to determine the cause of the behavior.
B) Ignore the incident because it is an attention-seeking behavior.
C) Ask the group what they think about the client’s behavior.
D) Stay with the group and ask another client to go and check on the situation.
A client has been referred to a mental health center by a juvenile court after being
arrested for vandalism. As the mental health center, the client refuses to participate in
scheduled activities and was observed pushing another client. Which action by the nurse
is the most therapeutic?
A) Permitting the client to refuse
B) Establishing firm limits
C) Forcing the client to comply
D) Offering rewards in advance
A nurse tells a client that the nurse will bring the pain medicine in 5 minutes after
checking on another client. The nurse returns ... minutes and administers the
medication as planned. The nurse is practicing which principle by returning as
promised?
A) Nonmaleficence
B) Fidelity
C) Paternalism
D) Autonomy
A client diagnosed with a personality disorder insists that a grandmother, through
reincarnation, has come back to life as a pet kitten. The thought process described is
reflective of which personality disorder?
A) Borderline personality disorder
B) Dependent personality disorder
C) Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
D) Schizotypal personality disorder
, Cluster A includes paranoid, schizoid, and schizotypal personality disorders.
Clients diagnosed with schizotypal personality disorder are characterized by
peculiarities of ideation, appearance, and behavior; magical thinking; and deficits
in interpersonal relatedness that are not severe enough to meet the criteria for
schizophrenia. In the question, this client's statement reflects ideations of magical
thinking
. Ateenage and a teenager’s parents visit the clinic to discuss the teen’s skin picking.
There are many bleeding wounds and various stages of scabs up and down both arms.
The parents are very upset about the behavior and want it to stop. Which would the
health care provider document?
A) Control dysfunction
B) Body dysmorphic disorder
C) Excoriation disorder
D) Disrupted family dynamics
Rationale:Excoriation disorder (skin picking) is the inability to stop recurrent
picking at skin for emotional release or anxiety release. Body dysmorphic
disorder is a preoccupation with slight or imagined physical defects that are not
apparent to others. There is not enough information to diagnose disrupted family
dynamics or control issues within the family unit.
. The nurse caring for a client diagnosed with Alzheimer disease can anticipate that the
family will need info about which medication ...?
A) Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors
B) Antidepressants
C) Benzodiazepines
D) Antihypertensives
Memory deficit is thought to be related to a lack of acetylcholine at the
synaptic level. Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor drugs prevent the chemical that
destroys acetylcholine from acting, thus leaving more available acetylcholine
. A nurse tells the child and caregiver that the nurse will interview each of them
separately. The caregiver questions why this needs to ... occur. What is the nurse’s best
response?
A) “By interviewing separately | can validate all the information.”
B) “Parents know best and | will determine this during the interview.”
C) “Research shows that info validates the child’s feeling.”
D) “Both interviews provide unique and meaningful info.”
To get an accurate picture of the child, the nurse should interview the child
and parent individually because each can provide unique meaningful
information. Research has shown that when parent and child are interviewed
separately the children provide information about internalizing symptoms and