Test Bank Brunner Suddarth’s Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing by Hinkle, PhD, RN, CNRN Kerry H. Cheever
of Contents
Table of Contents
Chapter
... [Show More] 01: Health Care Delivery and Evidence-Based Nursing Practice
Chapter 02: Community-Based Nursing Practice
Chapter 03: Critical Thinking, Ethical Decision Making and the Nursing Process
Chapter 04: Health Education and Promotion
Chapter 05: Adult Health and Nutritional Assessment
Chapter 06: Individual and Family Homeostasis, Stress, and Adaptation
Chapter 07: Overview of Transcultural Nursing
Chapter 08: Overview of Genetics and Genomics in Nursing
Chapter 09: Chronic Illness and Disability
Chapter 10: Principles and Practices of Rehabilitation
Chapter 11: Health Care of the Older Adult
Chapter 12: Pain Management
Chapter 13: Fluid and Electrolytes: Balance and Disturbance
Chapter 14: Shock and Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome
Chapter 15: Management of Patients with Oncologic Disorders
Chapter 16: End-of-Life Care
Chapter 17: Preoperative Nursing Management
Chapter 18: Intraoperative Nursing Management
Chapter 19: Postoperative Nursing Management
Chapter 20: Assessment of Respiratory Function
Chapter 21: Respiratory Care Modalities
Chapter 22: Management of Patients With Upper Respiratory Tract Disorders
Chapter 23: Management of Patients with Chest and Lower Respiratory Tract Disorders
Chapter 24: Management of Patients With Chronic Pulmonary Disease
Chapter 25: Assessment of Cardiovascular Function
Chapter 26: Management of Patients With Dysrhythmias and Conduction Problems
Chapter 27: Management of Patients With Coronary Vascular Disorders
Chapter 28: Management of Patients With Structural, Infectious, and Inflammatory Cardiac
Disorders
Chapter 29: Management of Patients With Complications from Heart Disease
Chapter 30: Assessment and Management of Patients With Vascular Disorders and
Problems of Peripheral Circulation
Chapter 31: Assessment and Management of Patients With Hypertension
Chapter 32: Assessment of Hematologic Function and Treatment Modalities
Chapter 33: Management of Patients With Nonmalignant Hematologic Disorders
Chapter 34: Management of Patients With Hematologic Neoplasms
Chapter 35: Assessment of Immune Function
Chapter 36: Management of Patients With Immune Deficiency Disorders
Chapter 37: Assessment and Management of Patients With Allergic Disorders
Chapter 38: Assessment and Management of Patients With Rheumatic Disorders
Chapter 39: Assessment of Musculoskeletal Function
Chapter 40: Musculoskeletal Care Modalities
Chapter 41: Management of Patients With Musculoskeletal Disorders
Chapter 42: Management of Patients With Musculoskeletal Trauma
Chapter 43: Assessment of Digestive and Gastrointestinal Function
Chapter 44: Digestive and Gastrointestinal Treatment Modalities
Chapter 45: Management of Patients with Oral and Esophageal Disorders
Chapter 46: Management of Patients with Gastric and Duodenal Disorders
Chapter 47: Management of Patients With Intestinal and Rectal Disorders
Chapter 48: Assessment and Management of Patients with Obesity
Chapter 49: Assessment and Management of Patients with Hepatic Disorders
Chapter 50: Assessment and Management of Patients with Biliary Disorders
Chapter 51: Assessment and Management of Patients with Diabetes
Chapter 52: Assessment and Management of Patients with Endocrine Disorders
Chapter 53: Assessment of Kidney and Urinary Function
Chapter 54: Management of Patients with Kidney Disorders
Chapter 55: Management of Patients with Urinary Disorders
Chapter 56: Assessment and Management of Patients With Female Physiologic Processes
Chapter 57: Management of Patients with Female Reproductive Disorders
Chapter 58: Assessment and Management of Patients with Breast Disorders
Chapter 59: Assessment and Management of Patients With Male Reproductive Disorders
Chapter 60: Assessment of Integumentary Function
Chapter 61: Managements of Patients with Dermatologic Problems
Chapter 62: Managements of Patients with Burn Injury
Chapter 63: Assessment and Management of Patients with Eye and Vision Disorders
Chapter 64: Assessment and Management of Patients with Hearing and Balance Disorders
Chapter 65: Assessment of Neurologic Function
Chapter 66: Management of Patients with Neurologic Dysfunction
Chapter 67: Management of Patients with Cerebrovascular Disorders
Chapter 68: Management of Patients with Neurologic Trauma
Chapter 69: Management of Patients with Neurologic Infections, Autoimmune Disorders,
and Neuropathies
Chapter 70: Management of Patients With Oncologic or Degenerative Neurologic Disorders
Chapter 71: Management of Patients With Infectious Diseases
Chapter 72: Emergency Nursing
Chapter 73: Terrorism, Mass Casualty, and Disaster Nursing
Test Bank - Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing 14e (Hinkle 2017) 2
Chapter 01: Health Care Delivery and Evidence-Based Nursing Practice
1. The public health nurse is presenting a health promotion class to a group of new mothers. How should
the nurse best define health?
A) Health is being disease free.
B) Health is having fulfillment in all domains of life.
C) Health is having psychological and physiological harmony.
D) Health is being connected in body, mind, and spirit.
Ans: D
Feedback:
The World Health Organization (WHO) defines health in the preamble to its constitution as a state of
complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease and infirmity.
The other answers are incorrect because they are not congruent with the WHO definition of health.
2. A nurse is speaking to a group of prospective nursing students about what it is like to be a nurse. What is
one characteristic the nurse would cite as necessary to possess to be an effective nurse?
A) Sensitivity to cultural differences
B) Team-focused approach to problem-solving
C) Strict adherence to routine
D) Ability to face criticism
Ans: A
Feedback:
To promote an effective nurse-patient relationship and positive outcomes of care, nursing care must be
culturally competent, appropriate, and sensitive to cultural differences. Team-focused nursing and strict
adherence to routine are not characteristics needed to be an effective nurse. The ability to handle
criticism is important, but to a lesser degree than cultural competence.
3. With increases in longevity, people have had to become more knowledgeable about their health and the
professional health care that they receive. One outcome of this phenomenon is the development of
organized self-care education programs. Which of the following do these programs prioritize?
Test Bank - Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing 14e (Hinkle 2017) 3
A) Adequate prenatal care
B) Government advocacy and lobbying
C) Judicious use of online communities
D) Management of illness
Ans: D
Feedback:
Organized self-care education programs emphasize health promotion, disease prevention, management
of illness, self-care, and judicious use of the professional health care system. Prenatal care, lobbying, and
Internet activities are secondary.
4. The home health nurse is assisting a patient and his family in planning the patients return to work after
surgery and the development of postsurgical complications. The nurse is preparing a plan of care that
addresses the patients multifaceted needs. To which level of Maslows hierarchy of basic needs does the
patients need for self-fulfillment relate?
A) Physiologic
B) Transcendence
C) Love and belonging
D) Self-actualization
Ans: D
Feedback:
Maslows highest level of human needs is self-actualization, which includes self-fulfillment, desire to
know and understand, and aesthetic needs. The other answers are incorrect because self-fulfillment does
not relate directly to them.
5. The view that health and illness are not static states but that they exist on a continuum is central to
professional health care systems. When planning care, this view aids the nurse in appreciating which of
the following?
A) Care should focus primarily on the treatment of disease.
B) A persons state of health is ever-changing.
Test Bank - Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing 14e (Hinkle 2017) 4
C) A person can transition from health to illness rapidly.
D) Care should focus on the patients compliance with interventions.
Ans: B
Feedback:
By viewing health and illness on a continuum, it is possible to consider a person as being neither
completely healthy nor completely ill. Instead, a persons state of health is ever-changing and has the
potential to range from high-level wellness to extremely poor health and imminent death. The other
answers are incorrect because patient care should not focus just on the treatment of disease. Rapid
declines in health and compliance with treatment are not key to this view of health.
6. A group of nursing students are participating in a community health clinic. When providing care in this
context, what should the students teach participants about disease prevention?
A) It is best achieved through attending self-help groups.
B) It is best achieved by reducing psychological stress.
C) It is best achieved by being an active participant in the community.
D) It is best achieved by exhibiting behaviors that promote health.
Ans: D
Feedback:
Today, increasing emphasis is placed on health, health promotion, wellness, and self-care. Health is seen
as resulting from a lifestyle oriented toward wellness. Nurses in community health clinics do not teach
that disease prevention is best achieved through attending self-help groups, by reducing stress, or by
being an active participant in the community, though each of these activities is consistent with a healthy
lifestyle.
7. A nurse on a medical-surgical unit has asked to represent the unit on the hospitals quality committee.
When describing quality improvement programs to nursing colleagues and members of other health
disciplines, what characteristic should the nurse cite?
A) These programs establish consequences for health care professionals actions.
B) These programs focus on the processes used to provide care.
C) These programs identify specific incidents related to quality.
D) These programs seek to justify health care costs and systems.
Test Bank - Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing 14e (Hinkle 2017) 5
Ans: B
Feedback:
Numerous models seek to improve the quality of health care delivery. A commonality among them is a
focus on the processes that are used to provide care. Consequences, a focus on incidents, and
justification for health care costs are not universal characteristics of quality improvement efforts.
8. Nurses in acute care settings must work with other health care team members to maintain quality care
while facing pressures to care for patients who are hospitalized for shorter periods of time than in the
past. To ensure positive health outcomes when patients return to their homes, what action should the
nurse prioritize?
A) Promotion of health literacy during hospitalization
B) Close communication with insurers
C) Thorough and evidence-based discharge planning
D) Participation in continuing education initiatives
Ans: C
Feedback:
Following discharges that occur after increasingly short hospital stays, nurses in the community care for
patients who need high-technology acute care services as well as long-term care in the home. This is
dependent on effective discharge planning to a greater degree than continuing education, communication
with insurers, or promotion of health literacy.
9. You are admitting a patient to your medical unit after the patient has been transferred from the
emergency department. What is your priority nursing action at this time?
A) Identifying the immediate needs of the patient
B) Checking the admitting physicians orders
C) Obtaining a baseline set of vital signs
D) Allowing the family to be with the patient
Ans: A
Feedback:
Test Bank - Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing 14e (Hinkle 2017) 6
Among the nurses important functions in health care delivery, identifying the patients immediate needs
and working in concert with the patient to address them is most important. The other nursing functions
are important, but they are not the most important functions.
10. A nurse on a postsurgical unit is providing care based on a clinical pathway. When performing
assessments and interventions with the aid of a pathway, the nurse should prioritize what goal?
A) Helping the patient to achieve specific outcomes
B) Balancing risks and benefits of interventions
C) Documenting the patients response to therapy
D) Staying accountable to the interdisciplinary team
Ans: A
Feedback:
Pathways are an EBP tool that is used primarily to move patients toward predetermined outcomes.
Documentation, accountability, and balancing risks and benefits are appropriate, but helping the patient
achieve outcomes is paramount.
11. Staff nurses in an ICU setting have noticed that their patients required lower and fewer doses of
analgesia when noise levels on the unit were consciously reduced. They informed an advanced practice
RN of this and asked the APRN to quantify the effects of noise on the pain levels of hospitalized [Show Less]