Maternal & Child Health Nursing: Care of the Childbearing & Childrearing Family 8th Edition Test Bank
Preview Extract
1. For which reasons would a nurse review infant mortality statistics in the United States?
(Select all that apply.)
A) Measures the quality of pregnancy care
B) Reviews information on overall nutrition
C) Compares health with those of other states
D) Determines infant health and available care
E) Provides an index of the country’s general health
Ans: A, B, D, E
Feedback:
Infant mortality statistics provide an index of a country’s general health, measures the
quality of pregnancy care, provides information on overall nutrition, and determines
infant health and available care. Infant mortality statistics compares the health with
those of other countries and not with those of other states.
2. The nurse is providing care in an organization that supports the maternal and child care
continuum. Which type of patient care area is an example of this approach?
A) Primary care
B) Team nursing
C) Case management
D) Family-centered care
Ans: D
Feedback:
Keeping the family at the center of care is important because the level of a family’s
functioning is important to the health status of its members. A healthy family establishes
an environment conducive to growth and health-promoting behaviors to sustain family
members during crises. A family-centered approach enables nurses to better understand
individuals and their effect on others and, in turn, to provide more holistic care. Primary
nursing, team nursing, and case management do not necessary take into consideration
the maternal and child care continuum.
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3. Which actions should the nurse perform when supporting the goals of maternal and
child health care? (Select all that apply.)
A) Advocates protecting the rights of the mother and fetus
B) Teaches family members interventions to improve health
C) Adheres to principles that focus on the needs of the mother
D) Encourages maternal hospitalization to regain strength and stamina
E) Assesses family members for strengths and specific needs or challenges
Ans: A, B, E
Feedback:
Actions that the nurse should perform when supporting the goals of maternal and child
health care include advocating the rights for the mother and fetus, teaching health
promotion interventions, and assessing the family for strengths and specific needs or
challenges. Adhering to principles that focus on the needs of the mother and
encouraging maternal hospitalization to regain strength and stamina are not actions that
support the goals of maternal and child health care.
4. The nurse is reviewing the 2020 National Health Goals and notes that which is a focus
of these goals?
A) Health promotion and disease prevention
B) Early diagnosis of chronic health problems
C) Effective use of medication to treat disease
D) Reduce the cost of health care and medications
Ans: A
Feedback:
The 2020 National Health Goals are intended to help citizens more easily understand the
importance of health promotion and disease prevention and to encourage wide
participation in improving health in the next decade. These goals do not focus on the
early diagnosis of chronic problems, use of medications to treat disease, or reduce the
cost of health care and medications.
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5. The nurse has noticed a change in the type of care needed to support maternal and child
health issues. What does the nurse realize as reasons for the changes in care? (Select all
that apply.)
A) Smaller families
B) Less domestic violence
C) More employed mothers
D) Stable home environments
E) More single-parent families
Ans: A, C, E
Feedback:
Nursing care for maternal and child is changing because families are smaller, more
mothers are employed out of the home, and there are more single-parent families. There
is an increase in domestic violence, and families are less stable and more mobile, which
influences homelessness.
6. During an assessment, the nurse asks a patient from a non-English-speaking culture
which types of home remedies and herbs the patient uses for health care. What is the
purpose of asking the patient this question?
A) Analyze for herbโdrug interactions
B) Understand the patient’s philosophy of alternative health care
C) Determine the types of medications the patient will need to be prescribed
D) Explain to the physician the patient’s preference for nontraditional medicine
approaches
Ans: A
Feedback:
Assessing what alternative measures are being used is important because the action of
an herb can interfere with prescribed medications. Assessing the use of herbal remedies
is not done to understand the patient’s philosophy of alternative health care, determine
the types of medications the patient will need to be prescribed, or explain the patient’s
preferences for nontraditional medicine approaches to the physician.
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7. The nurse notes that statistics on maternal mortality had improved but are again
becoming elevated. What does the nurse realize as a reason for this change in maternal
mortality rates?
A) Earlier prenatal care
B) Gestational hypertension
C) Increased vaginal deliveries
D) Treatment for chronic diseases
Ans: B
Feedback:
This increasing rate in maternal mortality is associated with more cesarean births, more
gestational hypertension related to preexisting hypertensive disorders, and lack of health
insurance for many Americans. This increase is not because of earlier prenatal care,
increased vaginal deliveries, or treatment for chronic diseases.
8. A new mother asks the nurse if all of the new baby’s injections can be given in one visit
because the mother is losing income from missing work because of the office visits.
What does this new mother’s issue indicate to the nurse?
A) The mother needs to find an alternative employer.
B) The mother’s income is more important that the baby’s health.
C) Missing work does not support the baby’s health maintenance visits.
D) The federal government needs to do more to support well-baby visits.
Ans: C
Feedback:
An area that needs additional research is finding effective stimuli to encourage women
to bring children for health maintenance visits. The mother losing income because of
missing work for well-baby visits will deter health maintenance visits for the baby going
forward. This mother’s issue does not indicate that the mother needs to find another job,
that the mother’s income is more important that the baby’s health, or that the federal
government needs to do more to support well-baby visits.
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9. The nurse works in a maternal and child care area that supports health promotion.
Which activities will the nurse perform to support this philosophy of health care?
(Select all that apply.)
A) Planning care
B) Patient teaching
C) Family counseling
D) New mother advocacy
E) Identifying nursing diagnoses
Ans: B, C, D
Feedback:
Extensive changes in the scope of maternal and child health nursing have occurred as
health promotion has become a greater priority in care. The nursing activities for health
promotion include teaching, counseling, and advocacy. Planning care and identifying
nursing diagnoses are a part of the nursing process and not specific to health promotion.
10. During a care conference, a nurse provides everyone with a copy of the latest research
on improving the success of breastfeeding for first-time mothers. Which Quality &
Safety Education for Nurses competency does this nurse’s action support?
A) Quality improvement
B) Patient-centered care
C) Evidence-based practice
D) Teamwork and collaboration
Ans: C
Feedback:
Providing research material supports the Quality & Safety Education for Nurses
competency of evidence-based practice because the nurse is integrating the best current
evidence with clinical expertise and patient/family preferences and values for delivery
of optimal health care. Providing research evidence does not support the Quality &
Safety Education for Nurses competencies of quality improvement, patient-centered
care, or teamwork and collaboration.
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11. The nurse is caring for a mother who has just given birth to twins of 28 weeks gestation,
each weighing 2 kg. What is the health risk for the mother and the twins?
A) Child mortality
B) Neonatal death
C) Infant mortality
D) Maternal mortality
Ans: B
Feedback:
Neonatal death reflects the quality of care available to women during pregnancy and
childbirth and the quality of care available to infants during the first month of life. The
leading causes of death during this time are prematurity with associated low birth
weight. Child mortality is the number of people who die during childhood years. Infant
mortality is the number of infants who die before the age of 1 year. Maternal mortality
is the number of women who die from activities related to childbirth.
12. The nurse is planning an educational session for community members to address the
issue of school-age child mortality. Which topic should the nurse identify as the highest
priority for this population?
A) Cancer
B) Assault
C) Suicide
D) Accidents
Ans: D
Feedback:
For the school-age child between the ages of 5 and 14 years, the number one cause of
mortality is from unintentional injuries or accidents. Other top five causes for child
mortality include cancer, assault, and suicide.
13. While providing care to a child, the nurse informs the parents about the treatment plans
and helps the parents make decisions about the child’s care needs. What do this nurse’s
actions support?
A) Autonomy
B) Empowerment
C) Accountability
D) Informed consent
Ans: B
Feedback:
Nurses promote empowerment of parents and children by respecting their views and
concerns, regarding parents as important participants in their own or their child’s health,
keeping them informed, and helping and supporting them to make decisions about care.
The nurse’s actions are not being done to support autonomy, accountability, or informed
consent.
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14. The nurse has been hired to provide care to patients on a maternal and child unit. What
will the nurse use to as a guide to legally provide care to this patient population?
A) Code of ethics
B) Nursing research
C) Standards of practice
D) Evidence-based guidelines
Ans: C
Feedback:
Understanding standards of care can help nurses practice within appropriate legal
parameters. The Code of Ethics will help with ethical situations. Nursing research and
evidence-based guidelines will help with providing care that is based upon best
practices.
15. The nurse is providing care to a new mother and infant according to the Quality &
Safety Education for Nurses competency approach. Which action should the nurse
perform to demonstrate the skill for the competency of safety?
A) Assess the mother for preferences based on personal values.
B) Ensure the mother and newborn have intact identification bands.
C) Introduce all members of the care team to the mother and family.
D) Document patient care using computerized spreadsheets and forms.
Ans: B
Feedback:
Action to demonstrate the skill of the competency of safety is to ensure that the mother
and newborn have intact identification bands. Assessing the mother for preferences
based on personal values is the skill associated with patient-centered care. Introducing
all members of the care team to the mother and family is the skill associated with
teamwork and collaboration. Documenting patient care using computerized spreadsheets
and forms is the skill associated with quality improvement.
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1. A school-age child, a member of a family with a mother, father, and toddler, is
hospitalized. The father is employed outside of the home, and the mother stays at home
with the other child. The mother is challenged with supporting both children at this time.
What should the nurse suggest to the mother?
A) Place the toddler in day care.
B) Suggest the father take time off to help.
C) Ask extended family members to help out during this time.
D) Visit with the patient after the father comes home from work.
Ans: C
Feedback:
In a time of crisis, the nuclear family is challenged because there are few family
members to share the burden or look at a problem objectively. The nurse should suggest
that the family locate and reach out to support people in their extended family during a
crisis. Placing the toddler in day care and suggesting the father take time off to help
might negatively impact the family’s financial situation and would be inappropriate for
the nurse to suggest these options. The option of visiting the school-age child after the
father comes home from work may not support the child adequately during the
hospitalization.
2. A preadolescent patient, a member of a single-parent family, has abdominal pain and the
health care provider suspects that an appendectomy might need to be performed. The
patient’s father is asking for a second opinion, whereas the mother tells the nurse to do
whatever needs to be done to help the patient. What does the nurse need to assess before
moving forward with planning care for this patient?
A) Permission to miss school
B) Identify the custodial parent
C) The type of health insurance
D) Plans for help upon discharge
Ans: B
Feedback:
The nurse needs to identify who is the custodial parent. This is especially important
when consent forms for care need to be signed. Once this information is obtained, the
nurse needs to clearly document it in the patient’s medical record. Permission to miss
school, health insurance, and needs after discharge do not necessarily need to be
assessed prior to planning care for the patient.
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3. During a family assessment, the nurse learns that the male parent smokes. What should
the nurse do with this information to support the 2020 National Health Goals?
A) Document the information in the medical record.
B) Explain that smoking can cause long-term health problems.
C) Ask if the male parent has made any efforts towards smoking cessation.
D) Suggest that smoking be done away from other family members because of health
concerns.
Ans: C
Feedback:
One of the 2020 National Health Goals is to increase the percentage of adult smokers
aged 18 years and older attempting to stop smoking from 48.3% to 80%. To support this
goal, the nurse should ask the parent if any efforts toward smoking cessation have been
taken. The nurse needs to do more than just document the information. Explaining that
smoking can cause long-term health problems may not be an effective strategy to
encourage the parent to stop smoking. Suggesting that smoking be done away from
other family members is assuming that the parent is smoking with the family members
present.
4. During a family assessment, it is identified that the mother is unemployed but stays at
home to prepare meals, monitor medication doses, and comfort the children with
emotional issues. The father works outside of the home and pays the bills. Which terms
should the nurse use to document the role of the father in this family? (Select all that
apply.)
A) Provider
B) Nurturer
C) Culture bearer
D) Health manager
E) Financial manager
Ans: A, E
Feedback:
The provider is considered the person who brings home the money, which would be the
father because he works outside of the home. The person who pays the bills is
considered the financial manager. The nurturer would be the one who makes the meals
or the mother in this situation. The health manager is also the mother because she is the
person who monitors medication doses. There is no evidence to support that either the
mother or father function in the role as culture bearer.
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5. The nurse is completing an assessment of a family with a preschool-age child. Which
areas should the nurse focus when instructing the parents on tasks needed during this
stage of family development? (Select all that apply.)
A) Prevention of accidental injuries
B) Importance of child’s socialization
C) Promoting health through immunizations
D) Socialization through sporting events
E) Need for dental care and health assessments
Ans: A, B
Feedback:
In the stage of family development with a preschool-age child, the parent’s tasks are to
prevent accidental injuries and begin the child’s socialization. Socialization through
sporting events, promoting health through immunizations, and the need for dental care
and health assessments are family responsibilities for the family with a school-age child.
6. The nurse is caring for a school-age child whose mother works two jobs, father is away
from the home during the week truck driving, and older brother has a part-time after
school job. The child will be hospitalized for several weeks for chemotherapy
treatments. Which nursing diagnosis should the nurse identify as being appropriate for
this family?
A) Impaired parenting
B) Parental role conflict
C) Health-seeking behaviors
D) Readiness for enhanced family coping
Ans: B
Feedback:
The diagnosis parental role conflict would address the parents’ work responsibilities and
schedules and the relationship of work to the child’s extended hospitalization. There is
no evidence to suggest that there is impaired parenting, health-seeking behaviors, or
readiness for enhanced family coping.
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7. The nurse is evaluating outcomes about a family’s ability to care for an adolescent child
that is recovering from a spinal cord injury. Which statements indicate that this family is
transitioning in a healthy manner?
A) The patient states the injuries โmessed upโ the rest of his life.
B) The mother states the need to have a break at least once per week.
C) The patient states fewer episodes of nausea with changing position.
D) The father states the child’s accident has brought the family closer together.
E) The mother states the ability to provide care for the child is becoming easier.
Ans: D, E
Feedback:
The statements that indicate that the family is able to care for an adolescent child that is
recovering from a spinal cord injury include the father’s statement about the family
being brought closer together and the mother’s statement about the care being easier to
provide. The patient’s two statements do not address the family’s ability to care for the
patient. The mother’s statement about needing a break does not measure if the family is
able to care for the adolescent patient.
8. The nurse is planning outcomes of care for a family whose infant was born with a birth
defect. Which outcome statement would be the most appropriate for this family?
A) The parents will seek information regarding the birth defect.
B) The parents will limit involvement with extended family members.
C) The mother will return to work after 6 weeks as planned before the delivery.
D) The father will learn to care for the infant so that the mother can return to work.
Ans: A
Feedback:
The family has a new member that has a birth defect. The outcome statement that would
be most appropriate for the family would be for the parents to seek out information
about the birth defect. The parents limiting involvement with extended family members
may indicate that the family will be isolated. The father learning to care for the infant so
that the mother can return to work does not take into consideration if the father is
employed. The mother planning to return to work after 6 weeks as planned before the
delivery does not take into consideration the newborn’s health care needs.
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9. The nurse is visiting a family with a toddler and school-age child. Which teaching
should the nurse provide to the parents that would be appropriate for both children?
A) Increased freedom
B) Actions to ensure safety
C) Encourage independent thinking
D) Importance of school experiences
Ans: B
Feedback:
The teaching that would support both of the children’s needs would be to focus on
actions to ensure safety. Increased freedom would be appropriate for the adolescent.
Encourage independent thinking would be appropriate for the young adult. Importance
of school experiences would be appropriate for the school-age child but not for the
toddler.
10. A recently separated mother is overwhelmed with caring for three children under the
age of 5 years. The oldest child has been recently diagnosed with muscular dystrophy.
Which health care providers should the nurse consult to help the mother? (Select all that
apply.)
A) Dietician
B) Physician
C) Pharmacist
D) Social worker
E) Physical therapist
Ans: D, E
Feedback:
The mother is recently separated and is raising three children independently. The older
child is diagnosed with a chronic illness. The nurse should consult a social worker to
help identify resources that the mother and family need. The nurse should consult with a
physical therapist to help the oldest child attain or maintain the maximum level of
physical functioning. A dietician, physician, and pharmacist will not necessarily be of
assistance to the family at this time.
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11. A family of dual-parent employment with two school-age children has moved into a
community. During the home visit, the nurse overhears the children talking about
something on the Internet being more interesting than school work. What type of
information would be beneficial for the nurse to share with the parents at this time?
A) School clubs that meet on the weekends
B) Community activities planned specifically for after school
C) Names of the Internet providers that service the community
D) Local businesses seeking workers for part-time employment
Ans: B
Feedback:
The children of a dual-parent employment family might spend significant amounts of
time on the Internet. The parents may not be aware of what Internet sites the children
are frequenting. To reduce the amount of time spent alone on the Internet, the nurse
should provide the parents with information about community activities planned
specifically for after school. This could reduce the amount of time the children spend in
the Internet while waiting for parents to return home from work. School clubs that meet
on weekends will not help with the children spending time on the Internet during the
week. Providing the names of Internet service providers does not address the issue.
Local businesses seeking workers for part-time employment is inappropriate because the
children are of school age.
12. The nurse is visiting a family new to a community. The mother has a disability, and the
adolescent child is being treated for anorexia. What will the nurse do first when
assessing this family?
A) Construct an ecomap.
B) Complete a genogram.
C) Assess the home for safety.
D) Discuss the daughter’s anorexia.
Ans: A
Feedback:
An ecomap documents the โfitโ of a family into their community by diagramming the
family and community relationships. Because this family is new to the community, this
would be the best thing for the nurse to do first. A mark of families who are new to a
community is they have few community contacts because they have not formed these as
yet. A family with few connecting lines between its members and the community may
need increased nursing contact and support to remain a well family. A genogram is a
diagram that details family structure and provides information about the family’s health
history and the roles of various family members across several generations. This might
be appropriate for the nurse to complete at a later time. Assessing the home for safety
and discussing the daughter’s anorexia could also be done at a later time.
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13. The nurse has been working with a family on actions that strengthen loyalty between all
members. Which healthy family behavior has been the focus of the nurse’s
interventions?
A) Division of labor
B) Physical maintenance
C) Socialization of family members
D) Maintenance of motivation and morale
Ans: D
Feedback:
In maintenance of motivation and morale, healthy families have pride in their family
and allow them to support each other during a crisis. Assessing for loyalty is one way to
measure this behavior. Division of labor focuses on family members dividing the
workload among family members and adjusting workloads as necessary. Physical
maintenance focuses on food, shelter, clothing, and health care. Socialization of family
members focuses on every family member feeling as a part of the family and interacting
with people outside of the family.
14. The nurse determines that a small nuclear family has achieved the family task of
division of labor. What did the nurse assess in this family to come to this conclusion?
A) Parents take the children out to meet the new neighbors.
B) Parents and children attend religious services every week.
C) Older children finish homework before watching television.
D) Mother cares for children while father works outside of the home.
Ans: D
Feedback:
The task of division of labor is when the workload is divided evenly between family
members. Parents taking children to meet the neighbors fulfill the task of family
member socialization. The family attending religious services every week fulfills the
task of member placement in society. Older children finishing homework before
watching television fulfills the task of maintenance of order.
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15. An extended family is experiencing a crisis. Excessive work demands have caused the
primary parents to work longer hours, but the grandmother who usually watches the
children after school is recovering from hip replacement surgery. What can the nurse
suggest to help this family through this period of time?
A) One parent reduces work hours.
B) Children go to the grandmother’s house after school.
C) Identify another extended family member to assist while the grandmother
recovers.
D) Recommend the children learn independence and stay at home alone until a parent
arrives.
Ans: C
Feedback:
A positive aspect of the extended family is the availability of many people for child care
and support. The family needs to call on this strength and ask another family member to
help with the child support until the grandmother recovers. One negative aspect of the
extended family is reduced resources because of fewer wage earners. This is not the
case because both primary parents are working. Asking for one parent to reduce work
hours would be a negative suggestion. Having the children go to the grandmother’s
home after school would negatively impact the grandmother’s healing and is an
inappropriate suggestion to make at this time. Recommending the children learn
independence and stay at home alone could be a safety issue and would be an
inappropriate suggestion at this time.
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1. Which question should the nurse ask when assessing the sociocultural aspects of a
patient’s family?
A) Citizenship
B) Occupation
C) Education level
D) Family structure
Ans: D
Feedback:
Family structure is a lifestyle area that is culturally determined. Citizenship, occupation,
and education level are influenced by culture but on an individual basis.
2. The nurse suspects that an adolescent patient from the inner city stereotypes other
people. Which statement did the patient make that caused the nurse to come to this
conclusion?
A) โKids who study are just nerds.โ
B) โAll people who live in the suburbs drive big cars.โ
C) โCity people are smarter than those who live in the suburbs.โ
D) โI stay away from people who live downtown because they look funny.โ
Ans: B
Feedback:
Stereotyping is expecting a person to act in a characteristic way without regard to his or
her individual traits. Ethnocentrism is the belief one’s own culture is superior to all
others as exemplified by the statement, โCity people are smarter than those who live in
the suburbs.โ Discrimination is treating people differently based on their physical or
cultural traits, or by performing an act. The statements that exemplify discrimination are
โkids who study are just nerdsโ and โI stay away from people who live downtown
because they look funny.โ
3. A young patient tells the nurse that it is taboo to date before the age of 18 years. How
should the nurse interpret this patient’s statement?
A) Everyone dates before the age of 18 years.
B) Dating before the age of 18 years is not permitted.
C) Dating before the age of 18 years can be done with permission.
D) Dating before the age of 18 years is permitted in large groups only.
Ans: B
Feedback:
A taboo is an action that is not acceptable to a culture. Dating before the age of 18 years
being taboo means that it is not permitted to be done. This does not mean that everyone
dates before the age of 18 years or that dating is done with permission or in large groups
only.
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4. Which nursing action supports a 2020 National Health Goal that addresses cultural
diversity?
A) Focusing on actions to enhance disease prevention
B) Reviewing actions to prevent accidents in the home environment
C) Discussing breastfeeding with a pregnant patient who is Hispanic
D) Analyzing the patient’s compliance with health promotion activities
Ans: C
Feedback:
One 2020 National Health Goal for cultural diversity is to increase the proportion of
mothers who breastfeed their babies in the early postpartum period from a baseline of
43.5% to a target of 60.6%. Actions to enhance disease prevention, prevent accidents,
and comply with health promotion activities do not support the 2020 National Health
Goals for cultural diversity.
5. The nurse is preparing to assess a pregnant patient who is a member of a
non-English-speaking culture. Which areas should the nurse assess to address cultural
diversity? (Select all that apply.)
A) Pain
B) Time
C) Touch
D) Environment
E) Communication
Ans: A, B, C, E
Feedback:
When conducting an assessment, areas to include that address cultural diversity include
pain, time, touch, and communication. Environment is a global term that may or may
not be appropriate to for an assessment on cultural diversity.
6. The nurse is beginning an assessment with a pregnant patient from a
non-English-speaking culture. The interpreter is having difficulty understanding what
the patient is trying to say and the patient is becoming frustrated. Which nursing
diagnosis would be the most appropriate for this situation?
A) Fear
B) Anxiety
C) Powerlessness
D) Impaired verbal communication
Ans: D
Feedback:
For this patient, impaired verbal communication is because of the frustration that is
occurring between the patient, interpreter, and the nurse. There is no evidence to support
the diagnoses of fear, anxiety, or powerlessness with this patient.
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7. A pregnant patient from nondominant culture arrives for a prenatal examination is
escorted to an examination room. When asked to remove clothing and wear an
examination gown, the patient hesitates. What should the nurse do to ensure cultural
sensitivity in preparation for the examination?
A) Leave the room.
B) Stay in the room.
C) Assist with clothing removal.
D) Stand the distance of business space from the patient.
Ans: A
Feedback:
The patient may be from a culture that values modesty. Because the patient hesitated to
remove clothing while the nurse was in attendance, the nurse should leave the room to
permit the patient to change into the examination gown. Staying in the room, assisting
with clothing removal, or standing at the business distance from the patient does not
respect the patient’s modesty.
8. The nurse teaches a pregnant patient from a nondominant culture that the health care
provider wants the patient to rest for several hours every afternoon. Which patient
statement indicates that teaching has been effective?
A) โI need to go to sleep a few hours earlier every night.โ
B) โI can stay in bed for a few more hours every morning.โ
C) โI can lie down before lunch and then again right after dinner.โ
D) โI need to lie down after lunch and not get up until it’s time to prepare dinner.โ
Ans: D
Feedback:
The nurse is evaluating the patient’s comprehension of teaching regarding obtaining rest
for several hours every afternoon. The statement about lying down after lunch and not
getting up until time to prepare dinner indicates the patient understands the teaching.
The other statements indicate that additional teaching is necessary because going to
sleep earlier each evening, lying in bed longer each morning, and resting before lunch
and after dinner do not demonstrate understanding of the health care provider’s
instructions.
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9. The husband of a patient in active labor asks the nurse to phone him when the baby is
delivered because he needs to go to work. Which nursing response respects the
husband’s culture?
A) Ask if he knows that he can stay with his wife during labor.
B) Tell him that all fathers now stay with their wives during labor.
C) Tell him he is missing out on the opportunity of a lifetime by leaving.
D) Insist he stay with his wife during labor because she will need his support.
Ans: A
Feedback:
When implementing care, the nurse needs to avoid forcing cultural values onto others.
The nurse needs to appreciate that such values are ingrained and usually very difficult to
change. The nurse also does not know the cultural value of work and should not assume
that the patient’s delivery is more important that work in that family’s culture. The
responses that โtellโ or โinsistโ that the husband stay to support the patient do not
respect the family’s culture.
10. A pregnant patient from a nondominant culture arrives 2 hours late for a scheduled
sonogram. What does this patient’s behavior indicate to the nurse?
A) The patient is confused.
B) The patient does not wear a wrist watch.
C) Time orientation may be different for the patient’s culture.
D) The patient’s culture may focus on the past and not the future.
Ans: C
Feedback:
The patient who is from a culture that has a different time orientation than the dominant
culture will have difficulty adhering to time expectations. The patient not arriving for
the diagnostic test at the scheduled time does not mean that the patient is confused. It is
inconsequential if the patient does or does not wear a wrist watch. There is no enough
information to determine if the patient is from a culture that focuses on the past and not
the future.
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11. A pregnant patient from a nondominant culture explains that milk and dairy products
cannot be consumed for 2 months during the pregnancy because of the need to fast for
her religion. Which response should the nurse make after learning this information?
A) โI’m sure that you don’t need to follow this while you are pregnant.โ
B) โAvoiding milk and dairy products for 2 months will harm the fetus.โ
C) โThere are other food sources where you can obtain the nutrients that are in milk.โ
D) โYou must have a great deal of will power to avoid milk and dairy products for 2
months.โ
Ans: C
Feedback:
The patient is explaining a religious practice that influences the patient’s culture. The
nurse needs to support this practice by offering other food sources for the patient to
consume which can provide the same or similar nutrients as the foods that are being
abstained. Stating that religious practices do not need to be followed while pregnant is
not taking the patient’s cultural needs into consideration. Stating that avoiding milk and
dairy products will harm the fetus is an inappropriate scare tactic to persuade the patient
to follow the nurse’s cultural expectations. Stating that the patient has will power has no
value and should not be made by the nurse.
12. The nurse is visiting a patient from a nondominant culture that was recently discharged
from the hospital for complications of pregnancy. Which outcome of care would be
appropriate for this patient?
A) The patient will return to normal activities of daily living.
B) The patient will understand signs of the complication developing again.
C) The patient will consult with cultural healers to ensure the complication does not
occur again.
D) The patient will follow medical advice and keep all scheduled appointments for
continued care.
Ans: B
Feedback:
Because the patient is from a nondominant culture, the best outcome of care would be
for the patient to understand the signs of the complication developing again so that
medical treatment can be obtained as soon as possible. An outcome that the patient will
return to normal activities of daily living may not be appropriate because of the
complication. The patient may consult with cultural healers about the complication, but
it is unclear if the complication can be treated by them. Expecting the patient to follow
medical advice and keep all scheduled appointments does not necessarily take the
patient’s cultural needs into consideration.
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13. During an assessment, a pregnant patient tells the nurse that โwhite foodsโ are not
consumed in the patient’s culture. What should the nurse do first after learning this
information?
A) Ask the patient to define โwhite foods.โ
B) Document that โwhite foodsโ are not eaten.
C) Explain that โwhite foodsโ have nutrients needed for pregnancy.
D) Discuss reasons why โwhite foodsโ are avoided in the patient’s culture.
Ans: A
Feedback:
The patient is from a culture that avoids eating โwhite foods.โ The first thing that the
nurse should do is assess what โwhite foodsโ are. From this information, the nurse could
then determine appropriate diet teaching for the patient. The nurse needs to do more
than document that โwhite foodsโ are avoided. The nurse needs to know what โwhite
foodsโ are before explaining their nutritional value. Discussing why โwhite foodsโ are
avoided demonstrates cultural insensitivity.
14. A patient from a nondominant culture is in the second stage of labor and is not
demonstrating any manifestations of pain. What should the nurse do to support this
patient?
A) Offer to provide the patient with a back rub
B) Measure the pain level with a pain rating scale
C) Discuss pain control measures with the physician
D) Nothing until the patient asks for pain medication
Ans: B
Feedback:
The patient may be from a culture where it is inappropriate to respond to pain. The
nurse needs to objectively assess the patient’s level of pain before implementing
nonpharmacologic or pharmacologic pain management measures. Offering to provide a
back rub may or may not be desired by the patient. Discussing pain control measures
with the physician may be premature. Doing nothing unless the patient asks for pain
medication is inappropriate, considering the patient is in the second stage of labor.
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15. A pregnant patient from a nondominant culture wants to deliver the baby โthe American
wayโ with epidural pain management. How should the nurse describe this patient’s
statement about childbirth?
A) Attempting assimilation
B) Combating ethnocentrism
C) Expression of acculturation
D) Stereotyping American behavior
Ans: A
Feedback:
Assimilation occurs when people from a nondominant culture adopt the values of the
dominant culture. The patient believes that epidural pain management is the American
way of childbirth. Ethnocentrism is the belief one’s own culture is superior to all others.
The patient is not demonstrating ethnocentrism. Acculturation is losing ethnic traditions
because of disuse. There is no enough information to determine if the patient is
practicing acculturation. Stereotyping is expecting a person to act in a characteristic way
without regard to individual traits. The patient’s desire to deliver the baby the American
way is not stereotyping.
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1. Which observation indicates to the nurse that a family is not functioning in a healthy
way?
A) The family pays cash for health care.
B) The father comforts his crying daughter.
C) The mother states, โThis family couldn’t function without me.โ
D) The father does not share his concerns so his wife will not worry about them.
Ans: D
Feedback:
Health family functioning includes communication with each other and identifying and
sharing feelings about the home situation. The family paying cash for health care does
not support a family that is not functioning in a healthy way. The father comforting his
crying daughter demonstrates healthy family functioning. The mother who believes the
family could not function without could be a statement of frustration or evidence that
the family needs her to maintain healthy functioning.
2. During a home visit, the nurse determines that a family is functioning in a healthy
manner. Which behavior did the nurse observe to make this determination?
A) A mother is angry that the father never helps with housework.
B) A brother is so jealous of his new sister that he hides her clothes.
C) A father wishes the family was able to spend more time together.
D) A mother states she has grown up since giving birth to her children.
Ans: D
Feedback:
A family that is supportive of all family members and provides an environment
conducive to each member’s continued growth and development is more likely to be
able to manage home care. The mother’s statement about growing up after giving birth
demonstrates growth. The mother that is angry because of no help with housework is
demonstrating unrealistic expectations of family members. A brother that hides clothes
is not successfully dealing with the stresses within the family. The father wishing the
family had more time together might be overwhelmed with the home situation.
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3. A pregnant patient experiencing exacerbation of asthma is prescribed home care. The
nurse is planning to assess the patient’s community for resources. On which areas will
the nurse focus this assessment? (Select all that apply.)
A) Religion
B) Age span
C) Health care
D) Recreation
E) Environment
Ans: C, E
Feedback:
For a patient with asthma, the community areas that the nurse should assess include
environment and access to health care. The environment could exacerbate the patient’s
symptoms and health care could influence the patient’s ability to obtain help if
necessary. Religion, age span, and recreation will not necessarily impact the
maintenance of the patient’s asthma.
4. The nurse is completing the health histories for twin toddlers. Which statement should
the nurse make to the mother that focuses on the 2020 National Health Goals?
A) Discuss adequate dental care.
B) Explain the need for the toddlers to have socialization with other children.
C) Remind the mother that the toddlers need regularly scheduled vaccinations.
D) Stress the importance of home safety and prevention of accidental poisoning.
Ans: C
Feedback:
The 2020 National Health Goal applicable to this situation is to reduce or eliminate
vaccine-preventable diseases such as measles, pertussis, and varicella. Dental care,
socialization, and home safety are not 2020 National Health Goals.
5. A preschooler, receiving home oxygen therapy, is excited about an upcoming birthday.
Which statement by the patient’s mother indicates that additional teaching on the safety
of home oxygen therapy is needed for the occasion?
A) โI’ll be careful that no guest smokes.โ
B) โI’ll be certain he doesn’t get too tired.โ
C) โHis brother can help him open presents.โ
D) โI’m baking a cake and we’ll have candles.โ
Ans: D
Feedback:
During the home visit, the nurse should have instructed the mother on home safety with
oxygen therapy. This includes knowing not to light candles near oxygen for a birthday.
The statement about no guests smoking indicates that teaching has been effective. The
statements about fatigue and having help with presents do not evaluate the effectiveness
of teaching on home oxygen safety.
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6. During a home care visit, the nurse learns that a pregnant adolescent is concerned about
being lonely at home. What should the nurse suggest to help with this problem?
A) The family could buy her a television set.
B) Her father could purchase her a cell phone.
C) The family might install an intercom system.
D) The family could have dinner together in the same room.
Ans: D
Feedback:
To combat the feelings of loneliness and support the family structure, the family can
plan to have one meal a day together, such as dinner, in the same room. A cell phone,
intercom system, or television set may or may not help the adolescent with feelings of
loneliness.
7. The nurse is assessing a patient for potential home care. Which patient statement
indicates that the patient will be able to take a medication that is prescribed for three
times a day?
A) โI can take the three pills together at one time.โ
B) โI will take one pill before breakfast, before lunch, and before dinner.โ
C) โI can take one pill when I have symptoms and save the others for later.โ
D) โI will take the pill when I get up in the morning and before I go to bed.โ
Ans: B
Feedback:
The nurse is assessing if a patient is able to properly take a medication that is prescribed
three doses per day. The statement that the patient will take one dose before breakfast,
lunch, and dinner is evidence that the patient will be able to safely take the medication.
Taking three pills together, taking a pill with symptoms, and taking a pill in the morning
and at night indicates that the patient will not be able to adhere to the prescribed
medication schedule.
8. A parent caring for an ill child at home states that at first it was difficult but now has
adjusted to the situation. Which would be the most appropriate nursing diagnosis for this
family?
A) Hopelessness related to prolonged home care
B) Health-seeking behaviors related to home care
C) Readiness for enhanced coping related to home care
D) Compromised coping related to difficulty of home care
Ans: C
Feedback:
Home care of a child can place a heavy burden on a family as the stress of being
responsible for an ill child’s daily health status can have a negative impact on a parent’s
self-esteem. The statement that the mother has adjusted to the situation indicates
readiness for enhanced coping. The mother is not demonstrating hopelessness,
health-seeking behaviors, or compromised coping.
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9. The nurse is explaining to a school-age child the need to soak the hands twice a day to
help with an infection. Which teaching should the nurse provide that would be
appropriate for the patient’s cognitive level?
A) โYou should soak both hands to get them clean.โ
B) โYou need to stay in bed while your hand soaks.โ
C) โWould you like to sit in the chair or stay in bed to soak your hand?โ
D) โI know your favorite show is on right now, but we need to soak your hand now.โ
Ans: C
Feedback:
Before anyone can be cared for at home, teaching will be required so the family
understands the illness and principles of care. Because the patient is a school-age child,
the nurse should provide choices so that the patient has a sense of control over the
situation. Soaking both hands may or may not be medically necessary. Telling the
patient to stay in bed or soaking the hands now does not provide the patient with a sense
of control and may lead to resistance or nonadherence to medical treatment.
10. A patient who is at 30 weeks gestation is prescribed bed rest and home care. Which
skills should the nurse anticipate providing when making the home care visits with the
patient? (Select all that apply.)
A) Health teaching
B) Monitoring vital signs
C) Bathing and washing hair
D) Monitoring fetal heart rate
E) Administering medication
Ans: A, B, D, E
Feedback:
Nursing care is considered skilled home nursing care if it includes primary health care
providerโprescribed procedures such as dressing changes, administration of medication,
health teaching, or observation of a woman status through monitoring vital signs or fetal
heart rate. Bathing and washing hair is not considered skilled nursing care.
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11. The nurse is preparing to obtain a health history from a patient with preeclampsia who is
at home. In which area should the nurse conduct the assessment?
A) Bedroom, where it is quiet and private
B) Kitchen, so other family members can participate
C) Porch, so the nurse does not have to enter the home
D) Living room, so as to not interrupt television viewing
Ans: A
Feedback:
The nurse should provide privacy and confidentiality when obtaining the health history
and performing a physical examination. The nurse should identify a private location
such as the bedroom. The kitchen, porch, and living room are not private areas for this
assessment.
12. The nurse instructs a patient who is at 28 weeks gestation on the correct use of the fetal
heart monitor at home. Which observation indicates that teaching has been effective?
A) The device is sitting on the kitchen table.
B) The patient cannot locate the device during a routine home visit.
C) The patient has two rhythm strips to share with the nurse during the home visit.
D) The patient has a log with the date, time, and number of fetal heart beats counted.
Ans: D
Feedback:
Fetal heart rate monitoring can be taught to the patient including how to record the
findings. The patient that has a log with the date, time, and number of fetal heart beats
counted indicates that teaching has been effective. Fetal heart monitoring should be
conducted in the reclining position and the device should not be on the kitchen table.
The patient who is unable to locate the device is not performing the assessment as
instructed. The patient who has two rhythm strips to share with the nurse may or may
not be performing the assessment as instructed.
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13. The nurse instructs a pregnant patient who is at home on bed rest to drink at least eight
glasses of fluid each day. What would be the best method to encourage the patient to
drink this amount?
A) Get up every hour and get a drink from the refrigerator.
B) Keep a pitcher of fluid readily available on a bedside table.
C) Drink cool liquids and avoid hot liquids because they increase thirst.
D) Drink the eight glasses before the spouse leaves for work in the morning.
Ans: B
Feedback:
All women during pregnancy should drink six to eight full glasses of fluid a day to
obtain adequate fluid for effective kidney function and placental exchange. The patient
on bed rest should have a supply of fluid close to the bed such as a water pitcher so this
can be done easily. Getting up every hour does not support bed rest. Drinking eight
glasses of fluid before the spouse leaves for work does not ensure adequate hydration
during the day. The temperature of the liquids is inconsequential. Hot liquids do not
necessarily increase thirst.
14. The nurse is preparing to make a home visit to admit a new patient to services. Which
actions should the nurse take to ensure personal safety? (Select all that apply.)
A) Keeping the car doors unlocked
B) Keeping the gas tank of the car full
C) Parking the car in a well-lighted area
D) Using a map to avoid getting lost in a strange neighborhood
E) Informing the agency of the estimated arrival time and expected return
Ans: B, C, D, E
Feedback:
Safety tips for making home care visits include keeping the gas tank full, park in a
well-lighted area, using a map to avoid getting lost, and informing the agency of the
estimated arrival time and expected return. The nurse should keep the car doors locked
for safety.
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15. During a home visit, the nurse begins teaching on medication safety in the home. What
should the nurse include in these instructions? (Select all that apply.)
A) Never take medication in front of children.
B) Use a reminder sheet and cross off when a medication has been taken.
C) Drink a full glass of water with pills to ensure they reach the stomach.
D) Keep all medication in a safe place above the height for a child to reach.
E) Place medication doses in empty candy or mint containers to reduce waste.
Ans: A, B, C, D
Feedback:
Instructions for medication safety in the home should include never taking medication in
front of children, using a reminder sheet to keep track of medication doses, drinking a
full glass of water with medication doses, and keeping all medication in a safe place
above the height for a child to reach. Medications should not be placed in empty candy
or mint containers because children might think that these items are candy and might
accidentally ingest someone else’s prescribed medication. This could lead to an
accidental poisoning in the home.
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1. After an examination, a pregnant patient is diagnosed with a cystocele. How should the
nurse explain this finding to the patient?
A) A fold of peritoneum behind the uterus
B) Pouching of the bladder into the vaginal wall
C) A part of the rectum is pushing into the vaginal wall.
D) Folds of peritoneum that cover the uterus front and back
Ans: B
Feedback:
Pouching of the bladder into the vaginal wall is a cystocele. A fold of peritoneum
behind the uterus is posterior ligament. A part of the rectum pushing into the vaginal
wall is a rectocele. Folds of peritoneum that cover the uterus front and back are the
broad ligaments.
2. A pregnant patient is concerned about a sharp pain that is felt in the lower abdomen
when making a quick move. What action should the nurse take to help this patient?
A) Assess when the patient’s last bowel movement occurred.
B) Explain that the sharp pain is tension on a uterine ligament.
C) Notify the physician because of manifestations of appendicitis.
D) Instruct that the pain is a pulled muscle and a heating pad will help.
Ans: B
Feedback:
If a pregnant woman moves quickly, she may pull one of the round or broad ligaments
causing a quick, sharp pain of frightening intensity in one of the lower abdominal
quadrants. This pain is not associated with bowel function. Pain of this type calls for
conscientious assessment or it can be mistaken for labor or appendicitis pain. This pain
is not because of a pulled muscle and application of heat is not indicated.
3. After an assessment, a pregnant patient asks the nurse questions about her changing
uterus and body. Which nursing diagnosis would be appropriate for the patient at this
time?
A) Anxiety related to being pregnant
B) Ineffective coping related to being pregnant
C) Health-seeking behaviors related to reproductive functioning
D) Disturbance in body image related to body changes with pregnancy
Ans: C
Feedback:
The patient is asking questions related to reproductive functioning which indicates
health-seeking behaviors. The patient’s questions do not indicate that the patient is
experiencing anxiety, ineffective coping, or a disturbance in body image.
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