NR 302 Exam 1 Evolve Questions & Answers
Chapter 1
1. An example of subjective data is:
a. Decreased range of motion
b. Crepitation in the left
... [Show More] knee joint
c. Lef t knee has been swollen and hot for the past 3 days
d. Arthritis
2. An example of objective data is:
a. A complaint of left knee pain
b. Crepitation in the lef t knee joint (assessed by palpation)
c. Left knee has been swollen and hot for the past 3 days
d. A report of impaired mobility from left knee pain as evidenced by an inability to walk, swelling, and pain on passive range of motion
3. Which of the following is an example of objective data?
a. Alert and oriented
b. Dizziness
c. An earache
d. A sore throat
4. A complete database is:
a. Used to collect data rapidly and is often compiled concurrently with lifesaving measures
b. Used for a limited or short-term problem usually consisting of one problem, one cue complex, or one body system
c. Used to evaluate the cause or etiology of disease
d. Used to perform a thorough or comprehensive health history and physical examination
5. What type of database is most appropriate when rapid collection of data is required and often compiled concurrently with lifesaving measures?
a. Episodic
b. Follow-up
c. Emergency
d. Complete
6. A nursing diagnosis is best described as:
a. a determination of the etiology of disease
b. a pattern of coping
c. an individual’s perception of health
d. a concise statement of actual or potential health concerns or level of wellness
7. What type of database is most appropriate for an individual who is admitted to a long-term care facility?
a. Episodic
b. Follow-up
c. Emergency
d. Complete
8. A patient admitted to the hospital with asthma has the following problems identified based on an admission health history and physical assessment. Which problem is a first-level priority?
a. Ineffective self-health management
b. Risk for infection
c. Impaired gas exchange
d. Readiness for enhanced spiritual well-being
9. A medical diagnosis is used to evaluate:
a. A person’s state of health
b. The response of the whole person to actual or potential health problems
c. A person’s culture
d. The cause of disease
10. According to the holistic model, a narrow definition of holistic health includes:
a. an optimal functioning of mind, body, and spirit within the environment
b. the absence of disease
c. the response of the whole person to actual or potential problems
d. the internal and external environment
Chapter 2
1. On the basis of median age:
a. the non-Hispanic white population tends to be younger
b. the Hispanic population tends to be older
c. the Asian population tends to be younger
d. minorities tend to be older than non-Hispanic white populations
2. What is the yin/yang theory of health?
a. Health exists when all aspects of the person are in perfect balance
b. Health exists when physical, psychological, spiritual, and social needs are met
c. Health exists in the absence of illness
d. Health exists when there is optimal functioning
3. While evaluating the health history, the nurse determines that the patient subscribes to the hot/cold theory of health. Which of the following would most likely describe this patient’s view of wellness?
a. Good is hot
b. Evil is hot
c. The humors must be balances
d. The phlegm will be replaced with dryness
4. Spirituality is defined as:
a. participating in religious services on a regular basis
b. a personal effort to find meaning and purpose in life
c. the process of being raised within a culture
d. a social group that claims to possess variable traits
5. Which theory has been expanded in an attempt to study the degree to which a person’s lifestyle reflects his or her traditional heritage?
a. Behavior theory
b. Heritage consistency
c. Congruence mechanism
d. Socialization experience
6. Each culture has its own healers who usually:
a. speak at least two languages
b. own and operate specialty community clinics
c. cost less than traditional or biomedical providers
d. recommend folk practices that are dangerous
7. Which of the following statements regarding language barriers and health care is true?
a. There is a law that addresses language barriers and health care
b. Limited English proficiency is associated with a higher quality of care
c. English proficiency is associated with a lower quality of care
d. Patients with language barriers have a decreased risk of nonadherence to medication regimens
8. When considering cultural competence, the nurse must develop knowledge of discrete areas to understand the health care needs of others. These discrete areas include understanding of:
a. His or her own heritage
b. Cultural and ethnic values
c. The heritage of the nursing profession
d. The heritage of the patient
e. The heritage of the health care system
9. Which of the following symptoms is greatly influenced by a person’s cultural heritage?
a. Hearing loss
b. Pain
c. Breast lump
d. Food intolerance
Chapter 3
1. The use of euphemisms to avoid reality or to hide feelings is known as:
a. Distancing language
b. Sympathetic language
c. Avoidance language
d. Ethnocentric language
2. While discussing the treatment plan, the nurse infers that the patient is uncomfortable asking the physician for a different treatment because of fear of the physician’s reaction. In this situation, the nurse’s verbal interpretation:
a. affects the nurse-physician relationship
b. impedes further discussion
c. helps the patient understand personal feelings in relation to his or her verbal message
d. helps the nurse understand his or her own feelings in relation to the patient’s verbal message
3. Which of the following statements made by the interviewer would be an appropriate response?
a. “I know just how you feel.”
b. “If I were you, I would have the surgery.”
c. “Why did you wait so long to make an appointment?”
d. “Tell me what you mean by ‘bad blood.’”
4. When preparing the physical setting for an interview, the interviewer should:
a. set the room temperature between 64° F and 66° F
b. reduce noise by turning the volume on the television or radio down
c. conduct the interview at eye level and at a distance of 4 to 5 feet
d. stand next to the patient to convey a professional demeanor
5. Parents or caretakers accompany children to the health care setting. Starting at years of age, the interviewer asks the child directly about his or her presenting symptoms.
a. 5
b. 7
c. 8
d. 11
6. Nonverbal communication is the primary form of communication for which group of individuals?
a. Infants
b. Preschoolers
c. Adolescents
d. Older adults
7. Viewing the world from another person’s inner frame of reference is called:
a. Reflection
b. Empathy
c. Clarification
d. Sympathy [Show Less]