NRNP 6665 Final Exam (2 Versions, 134 Q
& A, Latest-2022/2023) / NRNP 6665N
Final Exam / NRNP-6665N Final Exam:
Walden University | 100% Verified Q &
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Final Questions
1) Question: An illness of symptoms or deficits that affect voluntary motor or sensory functions, which
suggest another medical condition but that is judged to be caused by psychological factors because
the illness is preceded by conflicts or other stressors in known as which of the following?
A. functional neurological symptom disorder
2) Question: A condition characterized by the person giving approximate answers, with clouding of
consciousness, frequently accompanied by hallucinations or
other dissociative, somatoform or conversion symptoms is
A. Ganser Syndrome
3) Question: Which of the following can cause delirium? Check all that apply.
A. Polypharmacy B. Sleep deprivation
4) Question: Acute withdrawal from alcohol represents which type of clinical problem in psychosomatic
medicine?
A. Medical complications of psychiatric conditions or treatments
5) Question: The principal theoretician to bring psyche and soma together was which of the following?
A. Sigmund Freud
6) Question: Which of the following would not be included in the treatment plan for a patient with
illness anxiety disorder?
A. Exploratory invasive procedures to obtain diagnosis
7) Question: Which of the following is consistent with current literature about the relationship between
obstetrical complications and autism spectrum disorders (ASD)?
A. Research proves there is a positive correlation between obstetrical complications and ASD
8) Question: The epidemiology related to kleptomania includes which of the following?
A. Kleptomania isreported to occur in fewer than 5 percent of identified shoplifters.
9) Question: A frontotemporal dementia with onset in the fifth to sixth decade of life, more common
in men, marked by personality change and cognitive decline, is known as which of the following?
A. Pick’s Disease
10) Question: Which of the following demographics are consistent with autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
A. Four times more common in boysthan girls. [Show Less]