Use the 64 quiz questions to prepare yourself and test whether you know the subject matter.
Buy the quiz questions and be prepared for your next test.
Add to cartWhat is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?
The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.
input text value
What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?
This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.
input text value
Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?
Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.
input text value
Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?
North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).
input text value
What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?
Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?
International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.
input text value
What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?
How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?
The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.
input text value
Buy the quiz questions and be prepared for your next test.
Add to cart
Do you prefer to learn the quiz questions from paper? Then download the 64 questions as PDF.
Add to cart
Earn money by making quiz questions and learn directly for your upcoming test.
Create quizThese practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience.
64 questions
English
10-22-2024
What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?
The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?
This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?
Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?
North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?
It provides continuity of care.Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?
International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?
Maslow hierarchy of needs.How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?
The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?
Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?
How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?
What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?
What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?
In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?
How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?
What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?
What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?
What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?
Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?
How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?
How should students best understand the concept of ethics?
What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?
How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.
%1 Test Bank for Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition %2%3 These practice questions are designed to help you understand key concepts from Brunner & Suddarths Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, 15th Edition. Each question is followed by a detailed answer to enhance your learning experience. %4Q1: What is the ethical obligation of a nurse who is offered a position that involves procedures contradicting their personal beliefs?A1: The nurse should make the choice to decline this position and pursue a different nursing role.Q2: What does a living will specify according to the clients wishes?A2: This document specifies the clients wishes before hospitalization.Q3: Which action would be considered a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence?A3: Refusing to administer pain medication as prescribed.Q4: Which organization is responsible for developing the taxonomy of nursing diagnoses?A4: North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Q5: What is the most important rationale for documenting a clients care?A5: It provides continuity of care.Q6: Under which code is a nurse obligated to care for all clients, including those with AIDS?A6: International Council of Nurses (ICN) Code of Ethics for Nurses.Q7: What framework should be used for prioritizing client problems?A7: Maslow hierarchy of needs.Q8: How can a nurse best exemplify the principle of beneficence in the care of a client receiving palliative care?A8: The nurse tactfully regulates the number and timing of visitors as per the clients wishes.Q9: What must precede the determination of a nursing diagnosis?A9: Collecting and analyzing data that corroborate the diagnosis.Q10: Which ethical principle is violated when a provider arranges an unwanted procedure?A10: Autonomy.Q11: How does the presence of a living will influence a clients care?A11: The client may nullify the living will during the hospitalization.Q12: What aspect of nursing care constitutes part of the planning phase?A12: Achieve SaO2 92% at all times.Q13: What is an example of an interdependent nursing intervention?A13: Administering an IV bolus of normal saline to a client with hypotension.Q14: In which situation is it inappropriate to apply restraints to a client?A14: A client with urosepsis who is ringing the call bell incessantly to use the bedside commode.Q15: How should a nurse respond when a client is distressed about a research study involving a placebo?A15: The research study is in place and there is no way to know now.Q16: What characteristic should a nurse exemplify when applying critical thinking in care planning?A16: Openness to various viewpoints.Q17: What characteristic of critical thinking is used in determining the significance of data gathered?A17: Interpretation.Q18: What is achieved by asking supplementary open-ended questions during an assessment?A18: Validating what the client has said.Q19: Why might care plans differ for two clients with the same condition?A19: Individual clients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.Q20: How should a nurse best address a family conflict about a clients treatment?A20: Involve the institutions ethics committee.Q21: How should students best understand the concept of ethics?A21: The formal, systematic study of moral beliefs.Q22: What resource should a nurse prioritize for identifying appropriate expected outcomes?A22: Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC).Q23: How should a nurse define health in a health promotion class?A23: The state of being connected in body, mind, and spirit.These questions and answers are designed to enhance your understanding of medical-surgical nursing concepts and ethical principles.