Contemporary Medical Surgical Nursing 2nd Edition Test Bank by Rick Daniels and Leslie Nicoll
Chapter 1--The Health Care System and Contemporary
... [Show More] Nursing
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. The nurse ensures that a client’s bedspace is neat and clean with the call light within easy reach. The
nurse is focusing on which nursing theorist who realized the importance of the environment for care?
1. Florence Nightingale
2. Sister Callista Roy
3. Dorothea Orem
4. Martha Rogers
ANS: 1
Florence Nightingale’s theory focused on the environment for care. Sister Callista Roy’s model is
based in systems theory and an individual’s ability to adapt. Dorothea Orem’s model is the self-care
deficit theory. Martha Roger’s model is the science of unitary human beings.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply
REF: Emergence of Contemporary Nursing in the United States
2. The nurse is instructing a client on self-administration of insulin so that the client will not need a
health care provider to do this activity. The nurse is implementing which of the following aspects of
Virginia Henderson’s theory of nursing?
1. A caring relationship
2. Helping the client achieve independence from the nurse’s assistance as quickly as possible
3. Integration of objective and subjective data
4. Application of critical thinking
ANS: 2
Virginia Henderson’s theory of nursing is to help people achieve health or a peaceful death so that they
can be independent from the nurse’s assistance as quickly as possible. A caring relationship,
integration of objective and subjective data, and application of critical thinking are included in the
American Nurses Association’s essential features of professional nursing.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze
REF: Emergence of Contemporary Nursing in the United States
3. A client tells the nurse that he has an HMO for his health insurance. The nurse understands that the
purpose of this type of health plan is to:
1. ensure payment is made to Medicare for services rendered.
2. maximize the utilization of health care resources.
3. efficiently manage costs while providing quality care.
4. focus on the illness when providing care.
ANS: 3
Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) were created to efficiently manage health care costs while
providing quality care. An HMO is a type of managed care plan with the goal of providing wellness
care and not focusing on the illness during the provision of care. HMOs do not ensure payment is
made to Medicare for services rendered. HMOs also do not maximize the utilization of health care
resources but rather uses financial incentives to decrease care costs.
PTS: 1 DIF: Understand REF: Cost of Care
4. A client tells the nurse that he does not have a primary care physician but rather makes an appointment
with a doctor who specializes in the area in which he is experiencing a problem. The nurse realizes this
client is at risk for which of the following?
1. Fragmented care
2. Overpayment of services
3. Inability to sustain health
4. Finding an appropriate general practitioner
ANS: 1
In the 1980s, the close and trusting relationship between an individual and the individual’s physician
waned and was replaced by acquaintances with specialists based upon particular health care problems.
These episodes of care cause fragmentation of care. The client who utilizes specialists is not at risk for
overpayment of services, the inability to sustain health, or finding an appropriate general practitioner.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Providers of Care
5. The nurse is attending a master’s degree program in efforts to be educationally prepared to serve as a
hospital leader. The nurse realizes that this educational preparation will:
1. hinder the nurse’s ability to work with physicians.
2. be viewed as not supporting the profession of nursing by other nurses.
3. ensure the nurse is biased towards clinicians’ interests.
4. prepare the nurse to serve as strong clinical support with the ability to integrate business
and caring.
ANS: 4
The nurse is attending an educational program to serve as a hospital leader. This education will prepare
the nurse to serve as strong clinical support with the ability to integrate business and caring. This
education will not hinder the nurse’s ability to work with physicians. This education will not be viewed
as unsupportive to the profession of nursing. The education will ensure that the nurse is not biased
towards clinicians’ interests.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Clinical Systems Leadership
6. A client tells the nurse that all hospitals care about is doing the minimum for a client regardless of the
outcome. Which of the following should the nurse respond to this client?
1. “It does feel like that sometimes.”
2. “Health insurance companies have caused this problem.”
3. “The doctors will get paid regardless of the clients’ outcomes.”
4. “There are quality programs in place to make sure clients receive the best quality of care
regardless of the cost.”
ANS: 4
In response to concerns about safety and quality of care voiced by clients and providers, total quality
management and continuous quality improvement programs were initiated. These programs ensure
society that cost management is not compromising safety or quality. This is what the nurse should
respond to the client. The other choices do not address the client’s concerns nor do they explain quality
management programs.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply REF: Quality Measure Shift
7. The nurse is providing care at a time that is the most beneficial to the client. The nurse is implementing
which of the following Joint Commission Dimensions of Quality Performance?
1. Safety
2. Timeliness
3. Efficiency
4. Availability
ANS: 2
The dimension of timeliness means the degree in which interventions are provided at the most
beneficial time to the client. Safety means the degree in which the risk of an intervention and risk to
the environment are reduced for both client and health care provider. Efficiency means the degree in
which care has the desired effect with a minimum of effort, waste, or expense. Availability means the
degree in which appropriate interventions are available to meet the client’s needs.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze
REF: Box 1-1 Joint Commission Dimensions of Quality Performance
8. The nurse is providing care while adhering to safety as a Joint Commission Dimension of Quality
Performance. Which of the following did the nurse provide to the client?
1. Using a needleless device when providing intravenous medications
2. Keeping the siderails of the bed in the down position after providing a pain medication to a
client
3. Having the client sit in a wheelchair with the wheels in the unlocked position
4. Placing cloth towels over a spill in the room of an ambulatory client
ANS: 1
The dimension of safety means the degree in which the risk of an intervention and risk to the
environment are reduced for both client and health care provider. The nurse who uses a needleless
device when providing intravenous medications is adhering to this dimension. Keeping the siderails in
the down position is not a safe practice. Having a client sit in a wheelchair with the wheels unlocked is
not a safe practice. Placing cloth towels over a spill in the room of an ambulatory client is not a safe
practice.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze
REF: Box 1-1 Joint Commission Dimensions of Quality Performance
9. The nurse is planning and providing care while adhering to the American Nurses Association
definition of professional nursing. Which of the following does the nurse include when implementing
client care?
1. Follows the NANDA nursing diagnoses process
2. Integrates objective and subjective data
3. Respects cultural diversity of peers
4. Acknowledges the experience and training of physicians
ANS: 2
The American Nurses Association acknowledges six essential features of professional nursing. These
include: 1) a caring relationship, 2) attention to the full range of human health and illness experiences,
3) integrates objective and subjective data, 4) applies scientific knowledge and critical thinking, 5)
advances nursing knowledge through scholarly inquiry, and 6) promotes social justice. The nurse
integrating objective and subjective data is implementing one of the six essential features of
professional nursing. The other choices are not essential features of professional nursing.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze
REF: Emergence of Contemporary Nursing in the United States
10. The nurse has shifted her practice from an illness focus to a health focus. Which of the following has
this nurse implemented?
1. Standardized care plans
2. Critical pathways
3. Instructing a client on relaxation techniques to aid with sleep
4. Holding around-the-clock medication when a client is asleep
ANS: 3
The use of client education as a strategy to attain and maintain the potential for health is an example of
the shift of care from an illness focus to a health focus. The nurse instructing a client on relaxation
techniques to aid with sleep is implementing a health focus of care. The other choices do not support
the shift from an illness focus to a health focus.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Leadership
11. A client is admitted with a highly communicable disease. The nurses do not want to participate in the
care of this client. Which of the following should be done to ensure the client receives the highest
quality of care?
1. Adhere to strict standard precautions.
2. Plan to have the client transferred to another health care organization.
3. Ask the physician if the client can be cared for in the home.
4. Suspend the nurses without pay who refuse to care for the client.
ANS: 1
When providing care in a highly global environment, the risks of communicable diseases increases. In
the event that a client is admitted with a highly communicable disease and the nurses are fearing for
their own health and safety, the only safe approach is to ensure all staff adhere to strict standard
precautions. The other choices do not ensure that the client will receive the highest quality of care. The
nurses must learn emotional intelligence and resolve issues under fire.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Globalization
12. The nurse has been an employee of an organization for 2 years and is considering a job change. Which
of the following does this nurse’s plan suggest to any future employers?
1. The nurse moves to other jobs too frequently.
2. The nurse is inflexible.
3. The nurse is searching for a more challenging environment with career opportunities.
4. The nurse is willing to sacrifice home and personal life for a job.
ANS: 3
At one point in time, job changes every 2 or 3 years was considered a red flag for employers. This does
not hold true today. The nurse who changes jobs every 2 or 3 years is interested in career advancement
and success. Creativity is valued and opportunities are desired. Moving to another job in 2 to 3 years
does not mean the nurse is inflexible. The new generation of nurses does not want to sacrifice home
and personal life for a job.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Care Delivery Models
13. The nurse is experiencing pain and fatigue in both arms when using the computer to document client
care. Which of the following can the nurse do to reduce these symptoms?
1. Refuse to use the computer and document using a pen and paper.
2. Stand up when using the computer.
3. Adjust the keyboard and chair to reduce the pressure on the wrists and arms.
4. Ask another nurse to input the information for client care activities.
ANS: 3
Ergonomic hazards are increasing with health care providers and nurses in particular. Many of these
hazards are because of the implementation of computers for documentation. The nurse should adjust
the keyboard and chair to reduce the pressure on the wrists and arms when documenting with the
computer. The nurse cannot refuse to use the computer. Standing up may not reduce the nurse’s
symptoms. The nurse cannot legally ask another nurse to document client care.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply REF: Ergonomic Hazards
MULTIPLE RESPONSE
1. The nurse is planning care for a client and reviewing appropriate educational materials to use for
discharge instructions. Which domains of nursing is this nurse implementing? (Select all that apply.)
1. Nursing process
2. Clinical practice
3. Education
4. Literature
5. Administration
6. Research
ANS: 2, 3
The four domains of nursing are: 1) clinical practice, 2) education, 3) administration, and 4) research.
When the nurse plans care for a client, the domain being implemented is clinical practice. When
reviewing appropriate educational materials to use for discharge instructions, the domain being
implemented is education. The nurse is not utilizing the domains of research or administration.
Nursing process and literature are not domains of nursing.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply
REF: Emergence of Contemporary Nursing in the United States
2. The nurse suspects that another health care colleague may be chemically dependent when which of the
following is assessed? (Select all that apply.)
1. Prolonged work “breaks”
2. Clinical care omissions
3. Mood stability
4. Extraordinary accomplishments
5. Heavy use of fragrances
6. Inability to recall recent events
ANS: 1, 2, 4, 5, 6
Clues of possible chemical dependency include tardiness, late sick calls, frequent or prolonged work
“breaks,” inability to recall recent events, heavy use of fragrances, clinical care omissions or errors,
patient complaints or requests for a change in care provider, mood instability, and extraordinary
accomplishments. Mood stability is not a characteristic of a colleague who is experiencing chemical
dependency.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply
REF: Box 1-6 Clues to the Possibility of Chemical Dependence
3. The nurse is a member of a health care team that includes a physician and other health care providers.
These providers work together to ensure the client is relieved of suffering, has diseases cured, and
experiences enhanced health and performance. Which of the following are the levels of care
represented by this team of health care providers? (Select all that apply.)
1. Sustain life
2. Maintain health
3. Regain health
4. Minimize injury
5. Maximize cost
6. Attain enhanced health
ANS: 1, 2, 3, 6
The medical team’s mission is to relieve suffering and cure disease. This involved the three levels of
care: 1) sustain life, 2) regain health, and 3) maintain health. Once the shift toward health care
occurred, the fourth level of attaining enhanced health was added. Minimize injury and maximize cost
is not a level of care.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Providers of Care
4. A client tells the nurse that she is disappointed that her employer is offering a health maintenance
organization for a health care benefit. Which of the following can the nurse use as responses to the
client as advantages of this type of health plan? (Select all that apply.)
1. “Since there is a nursing shortage, clients need to stay out of the hospital.”
2. “This type of plan provides wellness care at a minimal cost to keep people healthy.”
3. “This type of plan helps clients avoid illnesses with high costs.”
4. “An HMO standardizes diagnostic and treatment decisions across the nation.”
5. “This type of plan ensures coordinated services from wellness to death.”
6. “This type of plan costs as much as the traditional plans, but the insurance companies get
the extra money from premiums.”
ANS: 2, 3, 4, 5
There are several missions and visions of managed care. The first is to provide wellness care at a
minimal cost to keep people healthy and avoid providing illness care at a higher cost. Another mission
is to standardize diagnostic and treatment decisions across the nation. Managed care emphasizes the
delivery of coordinated services across the care spectrum from wellness to death and uses financial
incentives to decrease length of stay and achieve cost efficiency. Managed care was not implemented
to address the nursing shortage. This type of plan does not cost as much as a traditional health plan nor
do the insurance companies receive the extra money from premiums.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply REF: Cost of Care
5. The nurse has incorporated several criteria that are essential for being a member of a profession.
Which of the following has this nurse done? (Select all that apply.)
1. Has passed the licensure examination
2. Works regularly scheduled shifts
3. Completed a bachelor’s degree in nursing
4. Limits absences from work
5. Joined the American Nurses Association
6. Reads evidenced-based information to incorporate into planning client care
ANS: 1, 3, 5, 6
There are seven essential criteria for a profession. The nurse has incorporated four of these criteria by
passing the licensure examination, the nurse has implemented a code of ethics; by completing a
bachelor’s degree in nursing, the nurse has been educated in an institution of higher education; by
joining the American Nurses Association and reading evidenced-based information, the nurse is
affiliated with a professional association that promotes and ensures quality practice. Working regularly
scheduled shifts and limiting absences from work are not essential criteria for a profession.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Box 1-3 Essential Criteria for a Profession
Chapter 2--Clinical Decision Making and Evidence-Based Practice
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. The nurse is implementing evidence-based practice. Which of the following is not a component of this
process?
1. Patient preference
2. Clinical expertise
3. Research evidence
4. Leader practice
ANS: 4
Evidence-based practice is the combination of applying research findings, creating clinical guidelines,
and the individualization of the plan of care to meet the patient’s needs and desired. Leader practice is
not a component of the evidence-based process.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: The Process of EBP
2. The nurse is planning the care for a client using an unstructured approach. Which of the following
approaches did the nurse most likely use?
1. Research
2. Trial and error
3. Nursing theory
4. Validated order
ANS: 2
Examples of unstructured approaches to plan client care include trial and error, tradition, and authority.
The approaches of research, nursing theory, and validated order all represent a structured approach to
planning client care.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Knowledge Bases for Clinical Decisions
3. The nurse is participating in an activity that is the first step of the ACE Star Model of Knowledge
Transformation. Which of the following is the nurse doing?
1. Creating evidence summaries
2. Evaluating outcomes
3. Integrating findings into practice
4. Participating in research
ANS: 4
The ACE Star Model of Knowledge Transformation depicts the transfer of knowledge according to
five sequential steps. The first step is primary research. Subsequent steps are: 2) evidence summary, 3)
translation, 4) integration, and 5) evaluation.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: EBP in Nursing
4. A committee has been developed to implement knowledge transformation when providing client care.
The members realize that the purpose of knowledge transformation is to:
1. reduce length of stay.
2. convert research findings to impact health outcomes.
3. reduce the cost of care.
4. increase the number of patients with health insurance.
ANS: 2
The core concept of the ACE Star Model is knowledge transformation. Knowledge transformation is
the conversion of research findings to have an impact on health outcomes by way of evidence-based
care. Knowledge transformation is not a method to reduce length of stay, reduce the cost of care, or
increase the number of patients with health insurance.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze REF: Definition of Knowledge Transformation
5. An advance practice nurse is being consulted to participate during the translation phase of the ACE
Star Model of Knowledge Transformation. During this phase, which of the following will the nurse
create?
1. Standardized care plans
2. Critical pathways
3. Clinical practice guidelines
4. Checklists to streamline documentation
ANS: 3
In the third step of the ACE Star Model of Knowledge Transformation, experts are consulted to
consider the evidence summaries, fill in gaps, and merge research knowledge with expertise to produce
clinical practice guidelines. The nurse is not creating standardized care plans, critical pathways, or
checklists to streamline documentation since these items are not a part of the ACE Star Model of
Knowledge Transformation.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply REF: Star Point 3: Translation
6. The nurse leaders of a health care organization are creating plans to change clinical and organizational
practices to support evidence-based practice. Which phase of the ACE Star Model of Knowledge
Transformation are the leaders implementing?
1. Integration
2. Evaluation
3. Translation
4. Evidence summaries
ANS: 1
During the Integration phase of the ACE Star Model of Knowledge Transformation, implementation
plans are put into action to change the individual clinician practices, organizational practices, and
environmental policies. Implementation plans are not a part of the evidence summaries, translation, or
evaluation of the ACE Star Model of Knowledge Transformation.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply REF: Star Point 4: Integration
7. The advance practice nurse is writing clinical practice guidelines. Prior to writing these guidelines
which of the following will the nurse need?
1. Current client census
2. Evidence summaries
3. Nursing department budget
4. Staffing ratios
ANS: 2
The ideal base for writing clinical guidelines are evidence summaries because they increase the power
and validity of the cause-and-effect relationship between interventions and outcomes. Current client
census, nursing department budgets, and staffing ratios are not used to write clinical practice
guidelines.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply REF: Evidence Summaries
8. The nurse is writing a systematic review. After the nurse formulates questions and locates relevant
studies, the nurse thing the nurse will do is:
1. update the reviews.
2. interpret the findings.
3. summarize and synthesize results.
4. select and appraise the studies.
ANS: 4
The next step in the systematic review writing process is selecting and appraising the studies.
Afterwards, the nurse will complete, in order, summarize and synthesize results, interpret the findings,
and regularly update the reviews.
PTS: 1 DIF: Apply REF: Method for Producing Systematic Reviews
9. The nurse is using the scale for rating the strength of research evidence for one research article for
potential inclusion in a clinical practice guideline. Which of the following is considered the strongest
evidence?
1. Individual cohort study
2. Meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials
3. Expert opinion
4. Case studies
ANS: 2
When utilizing the Scale for Rating the Strength of Research Evidence, the level with the strongest
evidence is level I, meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials. Level III is individual cohort studies.
Expert opinion is Level VII or the weakest evidence. Case studies are Level VI.
PTS: 1 DIF: Analyze
REF: Table 2-1 Scale for Rating the Strength of Research Evidence
10. The nurse is considering a research study for inclusion in a clinical practice guideline that has been
identified as being sufficient to determine effects on health outcomes. This research study would be
considered as being:
1. fair.
2. passable.
3. poor.
4. good. [Show Less]