Pnle 100 Items
Pnle 100 Items
Pnle 100 Items
1. A 10 year old who has sustained a head injury is brought to the emergency
department by his mother. A diagnosis of a mild concussion is made. At the
time of discharge, nurse Ron should instruct the mother to:
A. Albumin
B. D5W
C. Lactated Ringer’s solution
D. 0.9% sodium chloride solution with 2 mEq of potassium per 100 ml
11. During the first 48 hours after a severe burn of 40% of the clients body
surface, the nurse’s assessment should include observations for water
intoxication. Associated adaptations include:
A. Sooty-colored sputum
B. Frothy pink-tinged sputum
C. Twitching and disorientation
D. Urine output below 30ml per hour
12. After a muscle biopsy, nurse Willy should teach the client to:
A. Angina
B. Chest pain
C. Heart block
D. Tachycardia
17. When administering pancrelipase (Pancreases capsules) to child with
cystic fibrosis, nurse Faith knows they should be given:
A. Meningeal irritation
B. Subdural hemorrhage
C. Medullary compression
D. Cerebral cortex compression
21. After a lateral crushing chest injury, obvious right-sided paradoxic motion
of the client’s chest demonstrates multiple rib fraactures, resulting in a flail
chest. The complication the nurse should carefully observe for would be:
A. Mediastinal shift
B. Tracheal laceration
C. Open pneumothorax
D. Pericardial tamponade
22. When planning care for a client at 30-weeks gestation, admitted to the
hospital after vaginal bleeding secondary to placenta previa, the nurse’s
primary objective would be:
A. Suction equipment
B. Humidified oxygen
C. A nonelectric call bell
D. A cold-stream vaporizer
25. Nurse Oliver interviews a young female client with anorexia nervosa to
obtain information for the nursing history. The client’s history is likely to reveal
a:
A. A boggy uterus
B. Multiple vaginal clots
C. Hypotension and tachycardia
D. Bleeding from the venipuncture site
32. When a client on labor experiences the urge to push a 9cm dilation, the
breathing pattern that nurse Rhea should instruct the client to use is the:
A. Expulsion pattern
B. Slow paced pattern
C. Shallow chest pattern
D. blowing pattern
33. Nurse Ronald should explain that the most beneficial between-meal snack
for a client who is recovering from the full-thickness burns would be a:
A. flexed extremities
B. Cyanotic lips and face
C. A heart rate of 130 beats per minute
D. A respiratory rate of 40 breath per minute
35. The laboratory calls to state that a client’s lithium level is 1.9 mEq/L after
10 days of lithium therapy. Nurse Reese should:
A. Days 9 to 11
B. Days 12 to 14
C. Days 15 to 17
D. Days 18 to 20
37. Before an amniocentesis, nurse Alexandra should:
A. Hyperactive reflexes
B. An increased pulse rate
C. Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
D. Leg weakness with muscle cramps
47. When assessing a newborn suspected of having Down syndrome, nurse
Rey would expect to observe:
A. Ears
B. Eyes
C. Liver
D. Brain
49. A disturbed client is scheduled to begin group therapy. The client refuses
to attend. Nurse Lolit should:
A. Fatigue
B. Alopecia
C. Vomiting
D. Leucopenia
57. Nurse Katrina prepares an older-adult client for sleep, actions are taken to
help reduce the likelihood of a fall during the night. Targeting the most
frequent cause of falls, the nurse should:
A. Suspicious feelings
B. Continuous pacing
C. Relationship with the family
D. Concern about working with others
63. When planning care with a client during the postoperative recovery period
following an abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy,
nurse Frida should include the explanation that:
A. Not talking about the fact that the client is not eating
B. Stopping all of the client’s priviledges until food is eaten
C. Telling the client that tube feeding will eventually be necessary
D. Pointing out to the client that death can occur with malnutrition.
65. A pain scale is used to assess the degree of pain. The client rates the pain
as an 8 on a scale of 10 before medication and a 7 on a scale of 10 after
being medicated. Nurse Glenda determines that the:
A. Keeping the baby awake for longer periods of time before each
feeding
B. Assisting the parents to stimulate their baby through touch, sound,
and sight.
C. Encouraging parental contact for at least one 15-minute period
every four hours.
D. Touching and talking to the baby at least hourly, beginning within
two to four hours after birth
67. Before formulating a plan of care for a 6 year old boy with attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), nurse Kyla is aware that the initial aim of
therapy is to help the client to:
A. It involves providing home care to sick people who are not confined
in the hospital
B. Services are provided free of charge to people within the catchment
area.
C. The public health nurse functions as part of a team providing a
public health nursing services.
D. Public health nursing focuses on preventive, not curative, services.
74. Which of the following is the mission of the Department of Health?
A. Effectiveness
B. Efficiency
C. Adequacy
D. Appropriateness
76. Lissa is a B.S.N. graduate. She want to become a Public Health Nurse.
Where will she apply?
A. Department of Health
B. Provincial Health Office
C. Regional Health Office
D. Rural Health Unit
77. As an epidemiologist, Nurse Celeste is responsible for reporting cases of
notifiable diseases. What law mandates reporting of cases of notifiable
diseases?
A. Act 3573
B. R.A. 3753
C. R.A. 1054
D. R.A. 1082
78. Nurse Fay is aware that isolation of a child with measles belongs to what
level of prevention?
A. Primary
B. Secondary
C. Intermediate
D. Tertiary
79. Nurse Gina is aware that the following is an advantage of a home visit?
A. Scalar chain
B. Discipline
C. Unity of command
D. Order
86. Nurse Joey discusses the goal of the department. Which of the following
statements is a goal?
A. Smoothing
B. Compromise
C. Avoidance
D. Restriction
89. Nurse Bea plans of assigning competent people to fill the roles designed
in the hierarchy. Which process refers to this?
A. Staffing
B. Scheduling
C. Recruitment
D. Induction
90. Nurse Linda tries to design an organizational structure that allows
communication to flow in all directions and involve workers in decision
making. Which form of organizational structure is this?
A. Centralized
B. Decentralized
C. Matrix
D. Informal
91. When documenting information in a client’s medical record, the nurse
should:
A. Hand washing
B. Nasogastric tube irrigation
C. I.V. cannula insertion
D. Colostomy irrigation
94. The nurse is performing wound care using surgical asepsis. Which of the
following practices violates surgical asepsis?
A. Stream seeding
B. Stream clearing
C. Destruction of breeding places
D. Zooprophylaxis
97. In Integrated Management of Childhood Illness, severe conditions
generally require urgent referral to a hospital. Which of the following severe
conditions DOES NOT always require urgent referral to a hospital?
A. Mastoiditis
B. Severe dehydration
C. Severe pneumonia
D. Severe febrile disease
98. A mother brought her daughter, 4 years old, to the RHU because of cough
and colds. Following the IMCI assessment guide, which of the following is a
danger sign that indicates the need for urgent referral to a hospital?
A. Inability to drink
B. High grade fever
C. Signs of severe dehydration
D. Cough for more than 30 days
99. Food fortification is one of the strategies to prevent micronutrient
deficiency conditions. R.A. 8976 mandates fortification of certain food items.
Which of the following is among these food items?
A. Sugar
B. Bread
C. Margarine
D. Filled milk
100. The major sign of iron deficiency anemia is pallor. What part is best
examined for pallor?
A. Palms
B. Nailbeds
C. Around the lips
D. Lower conjunctival sac
Answers and Rationales
1. C. Check for any change in responsiveness every two hours until the
follow-up visit. Signs of an epidural hematoma in children usually do
not appear for 24 hours or more hours; a follow-up visit usually is
arranged for one to two days after the injury.
2. A. Arteriolar constriction occurs.The early compensation of shock is
cardiovascular and is seen in changes in pulse, BP, and pulse
pressure; blood is shunted to vital centers, particularly heart and
brain.
3. A. Allow the client to open canned or pre-packaged food. The client’s
comfort, safety, and nutritional status are the priorities; the client
may feel comfortable to eat if the food has been sealed before
reaching the mental health facility.
4. D. “Joining a support group of parents who are coping with this problem
can be quite helpful. Taking with others in similar circumstances
provides support and allows for sharing of experiences.
5. B. Observe the dressing at the back of the neck for the presence of
blood. Drainage flows by gravity.
6. C. Prepare her for a pelvic examination. Pelvic examination would
reveal dilation and effacement
7. D. On the right side of the heart. Pulmonic stenosis increases
resistance to blood flow, causing right ventricular hyperthropy; with
right ventricular failure there is an increase in pressure on the right
side of the heart.
8. A. Eating patterns are altered. A new dietary regimen, with a balance of
foods from the food pyramid, must be established and continued for
weight reduction to occur and be maintained.
9. B. “It is Ok to cry; I’ll just stay with you for now”. This portrays a
nonjudgmental attitude that recognizes the client’s needs.
10. C. Lactated Ringer’s solution. Lactated Ringer’s solution replaces
lost sodium and corrects metabolic acidosis, both of which
commonly occur following a burn. Albumin is used as adjunct
therapy, not primary fluid replacement. Dextrose isn’t given to burn
patients during the first 24 hours because it can cause
pseudodiabetes. The patient is hyperkalemic from the potassium
shift from the intracellular space to the plasma, so potassium would
be detrimental.
11. C. Twitching and disorientation. Excess extracellular fluid moves
into cells (water intoxication); intracellular fluid excess in sensitive
brain cells causes altered mental status; other signs include
anorexia nervosa, nausea, vomiting, twitching, sleepiness, and
convulsions.
12. B. Resume the usual diet as soon as desired. As long as the client has
no nausea or vomiting, there are no dietary restriction.
13. B. Shrinkage of the residual limb must be completed. Shrinkage of the
residual limb, resulting from reduction of subcutaneous fat and
interstitial fluid, must occur for an adequate fit between the limb and
the prosthesis.
14. A. Change the maternal position. Stimulation of the sympathetic
nervous system is an initial response to mild hypoxia that
accompanies partial cord compression (umbilical vein) during
contractions; changing the maternal position can alleviate the
compression.
15. A. Perform a finger stick to test the client’s blood glucose level. The
client has signs of diabetes, which may result from steroid therapy,
testing the blood glucose level is a method of screening for
diabetes, thus gathering more data.
16. C. Heart block. This is the primary indication for a pacemaker
because there is an interfere with the electrical conduction system
of the heart.
17. A. With meals and snacks. Pancreases capsules must be taken with
food and snacks because it acts on the nutrients and readies them
for absorption.
18. B. Put a hat on the infant’s head. Oxygen has cooling effect, and the
baby should be kept warm so that metabolic activity and oxygen
demands are not increased.
19. C. Wear an Ultra-Filter mask when they are in the client’s
room. Tubercle bacilli are transmitted through air currents; therefore
personal protective equipment such as an Ultra-Filter mask is
necessary.
20. D. Cerebral cortex compression. Cerebral compression affects
pyramidal tracts, resulting in decorticate rigidity and cranial nerve
injury, which cause pupil dilation.
21. A.Mediastinal shift. Mediastinal structures move toward the
uninjured lung, reducing oxygenation and venous return.
22. C. Prevent situations that may stimulate the cervix or
uterus. Stimulation of the cervix or uterus may cause bleeding or
hemorrhage and should be avoided.
23. C. Severe shortness of breath. This could indicate a recurrence of the
pneumothorax as one side of the lung is inadequate to meet the
oxygen demands of the body.
24. A. Suction equipment. Respiratory complications can occur
because of edema of the glottis or injury to the recurrent laryngeal
nerve.
25. A. Strong desire to improve her body image. Clients with anorexia
nervosa have a disturbed self image and always see themselves as
fat and needing further reducing.
26. B. Attempting to reduce or limit situations that increase
anxiety. Persons with high anxiety levels develop various behaviors
to relieve their anxiety; by reducing anxiety, the need for these
obsessive-compulsive action is reduced.
27. C. Becomes fussy when frustrated and displays a shortened attention
span. Shortened attention span and fussy behavior may indicate a
change in intracranial pressure and/or shunt malfunction.
28. B. Maintaining the ordered hydration. Promoting hydration maintains
urine production at a higher rate, which flushes the bladder and
prevents urinary stasis and possible infection.
29. C. Taking the client’s pedal pulse in the affected limb. Monitoring a
pedal pulse will assess circulation to the foot.
30. A. “Where are you?”. “Where are you?” is the best question to elicit
information about the client’s orientation to place because it
encourages a response that can be assessed.
31. D. Bleeding from the venipuncture site. This indicates a
fibrinogenemia; massive clotting in the area of the separation has
resulted in a lowered circulating fibrinogen.
32. D. blowing pattern. Clients should use a blowing pattern to
overcome the premature urge to push.
33. A. Cheeseburger and a malted. Of the selections offered, this is the
highest in calories and protein, which are needed for increased
basal metabolic rate and for tissue repair.
34. B. Cyanotic lips and face. Central cyanosis (blue lips and face)
indicates lowered oxygenation of the blood, caused by either
decreased lung expansion or right to left shunting of blood.
35. A. Notify the physician of the findings because the level is dangerously
high. Levels close to 2 mEq/L are dangerously close to the toxic
level; immediate action must be taken.
36. C. Days 15 to 17. Ovulation occurs approximately 14 days before
the next menses, about the 16th day in 30 day cycle; the 15th to
17th days would be the best time to avoid sexual intercourse.
37. C. Assure that informed consent has been obtained from the client. An
invasive procedure such as amniocentesis requires informed
consent.
38. D. Prevent development of respiratory distress. Respiratory distress or
arrest may occur when the serum level of magnesium sulfate
reaches 12 to 15 mg/dl; deep tendon reflexes disappear when the
serum level is 10 to 12 mg/dl; the drug is withheld in the absence of
deep tendon reflexes; the therapeutic serum level is 5 to 8 mg/dl.
39. A. Obtaining the child’s daily weight. Weight monitoring is the most
useful means of assessing fluid balance and changes in the
edematous state; 1 liter of fluid weighs about 2.2 pounds.
40. C. Reduces the inflammatory response of tissues. Corticosteroids act
to decrease inflammation which decreases edema.
41. D. An audible click on hip manipulation. With specific manipulation,
an audible click may be heard of felt as he femoral head slips into
the acetabulum.
42. B. Allow the denial but be available to discuss death. This does not
remove client’s only way of coping, and it permits future movement
through the grieving process when the client is ready.
43. B. Divide food into four to six meals a day. The volume of food in the
stomach should be kept small to limit pressure on the cardiac
sphincter.
44. B. “I feel washed out; there isn’t much left”. The client’s statement
infers an emptiness with an associated loss.
45. A. Vitamin K is not absorbed. Vitamin K, a fat soluble vitamin, is not
absorbed from the GI tract in the absence of bile; bile enters the
duodenum via the common bile duct.
46. D. Leg weakness with muscle cramps. Impulse conduction of skeletal
muscle is impaired with decreased potassium levels, muscular
weakness and cramps may occur with hypokalemia.
47. D. Simian lines on the hands. This is characteristic finding in
newborns with Down syndrome.
48. B. Eyes. Rheumatoid arthritis can cause inflammation of the iris
and ciliary body of the eyes which may lead to blindness.
49. A. Accept the client’s decision without discussion. This is all the nurse
can do until trust is established; facing the client to attend will
disrupt the group.
50. D. Provide a simple explanation of the procedure and continue to
reassure the client. The nurse should offer support and use clear,
simple terms to allay client’s anxiety.
51. D. If I have difficulty in inserting the irrigating tube into the
stoma”. This occurs with stenosis of the stoma; forcing insertion of
the tube could cause injury.
52. C. Blood loss of 850 ml after a vaginal birth. Excessive blood loss
predisposes the client to an increased risk of infection because of
decreased maternal resistance; they expected blood loss is 350 to
500 ml.
53. A. Provide frequent saline mouthwashes. This is soothing to the oral
mucosa and helps prevent infection.
54. B. “Society makes people react in old ways”. The client is incapable
of accepting responsibility for self-created problems and blames
society for the behavior.
55. A. Taste and smell. Swelling can obstruct nasal breathing,
interfering with the senses of taste and smell.
56. A. Fatigue. Fatigue is a major problem caused by an increase in
waste products because of catabolic processes.
57. A. Offer the client assistance to the bathroom. Statistics indicate that
the most frequent cause of falls by hospitalized clients is getting up
or attempting to get up to the bathroom unassisted.
58. D. Turn completely over, sit momentarily without support, reach to be
picked up. These abilities are age-appropriate for the 6 month old
child.
59. D. Feed the baby on the unaffected breast first until the affected breast
heals. The most vigorous sucking will occur during the first few
minutes of breastfeeding when the infant would be on the
unaffected breast; later suckling is less traumatic.
60. D. Place sterile cotton loosely in the external ear of the client. This
would absorb the drainage without causing further trauma.
61. D. Airing their feelings regarding the transmission of the disease to the
child. Discussion with parents who have children with similar
problems helps to reduce some of their discomfort and guilt.
62. A. Suspicious feelings. The nurse must deal with these feelings and
establish basic trust to promote a therapeutic milieu.
63. A. Surgical menopause will occur. When a bilateral oophorectomy is
performed, both ovaries are excised, eliminating ovarian hormones
and initiating response.
64. D. Pointing out to the client that death can occur with malnutrition. The
client expects the nurse to focus on eating, but the emphasis should
be placed on feelings rather than actions.
65. B. Medication is not adequately effective. The expected effect should
be more than a one point decrease in the pain level.
66. B. Assisting the parents to stimulate their baby through touch, sound,
and sight. Stimuli are provided via all the senses; since the infant’s
behavioral development is enhanced through parent-infant
interactions, these interactions should be encouraged.
67. D. Recognize himself as an independent person of worth. Academic
deficits, an inability to function within constraints required of certain
settings, and negative peer attitudes often lead to low self-esteem.
68. B. Monitoring the child’s blood pressure. Because the tumor is of
renal origin, the rennin angiotensin mechanism can be involved, and
blood pressure monitoring is important.
69. A. Nursing unit manager. Controlled substance issues for a
particular nursing unit are the responsibility of that unit’s nurse
manager.
70. D. Encourage coughing, deep breathing, and range of motion to the arm
on the affected side. All these interventions promote aeration of the re-
expanding lung and maintenance of function in the arm and
shoulder on the affected side.
71. A. For people to attain their birthrights of health and
longevity. According to Winslow, all public health efforts are for
people to realize their birthrights of health and longevity.
72. C. Swaroop’s index. Swaroop’s index is the percentage of the
deaths aged 50 years or older. Its inverse represents the percentage
of untimely deaths (those who died younger than 50 years).
73. D. Public health nursing focuses on preventive, not curative,
services.. The catchment area in PHN consists of a residential
community, many of whom are well individuals who have greater
need for preventive rather than curative services.
74. B. Ensure the accessibility and quality of health care. Ensuring the
accessibility and quality of health care is the primary mission of
DOH.
75. B. Efficiency. Efficiency is determining whether the goals were
attained at the least possible cost.
76. D. Rural Health Unit. R.A. 7160 devolved basic health services to
local government units (LGU’s ). The public health nurse is an
employee of the LGU.
77. A. Act 3573. Act 3573, the Law on Reporting of Communicable
Diseases, enacted in 1929, mandated the reporting of diseases
listed in the law to the nearest health station.
78. A. Primary. The purpose of isolating a client with a communicable
disease is to protect those who are not sick (specific disease
prevention).
79. B. It provides an opportunity to do first hand appraisal of the home
situation. Choice A is not correct since a home visit requires that the
nurse spend so much time with the family. Choice C is an advantage
of a group conference, while choice D is true of a clinic consultation.
80. B. Should minimize if not totally prevent the spread of infection. Bag
technique is performed before and after handling a client in the
home to prevent transmission of infection to and from the client.
81. A. Recognizes staff for going beyond expectations by giving them
citations. Path Goal theory according to House and associates
rewards good performance so that others would do the same.
82. D. Inspires others with vision. Inspires others with a vision is
characteristic of a transformational leader. He is focused more on
the day-to-day operations of the department/unit.
83. A. Psychological and sociological needs are emphasized. When the
functional method is used, the psychological and sociological needs
of the patients are neglected; the patients are regarded as ‘tasks to
be done”
84. B. Preparing a nursing care plan in collaboration with the patient. The
best source of information about the priority needs of the patient is
the patient himself. Hence using a nursing care plan based on his
expressed priority needs would ensure meeting his needs
effectively.
85. C. Unity of command. The principle of unity of command means
that employees should receive orders coming from only one
manager and not from two managers. This averts the possibility of
sowing confusion among the members of the organization.
86. A. Increase the patient satisfaction rate. Goal is a desired result
towards which efforts are directed. Options AB, C and D are all
objectives which are aimed at specific end.
87. A. Uses visioning as the essence of leadership. Transformational
leadership relies heavily on visioning as the core of leadership.
88. C. Avoidance. This strategy shuns discussing the issue head-on
and prefers to postpone it to a later time. In effect the problem
remains unsolved and both parties are in a lose-lose situation.
89. A. Staffing. Staffing is a management function involving putting
the best people to accomplish tasks and activities to attain the
goals of the organization.
90. B. Decentralized. Decentralized structures allow the staff to make
decisions on matters pertaining to their practice and communicate
in downward, upward, lateral and diagonal flow.
91. D. end each entry with the nurse’s signature and title. The end of each
entry should include the nurse’s signature and title; the signature
holds the nurse accountable for the recorded information. Erasing
errors in documentation on a legal document such as a client’s
chart isn’t permitted by law. Because a client’s medical record is
considered a legal document, the nurse should make all entries in
ink. The nurse is accountable for the information recorded and
therefore shouldn’t leave any blank lines in which another health
care worker could make additions.
92. A. Allergies and socioeconomic status. General background data
consist of such components as allergies, medical history, habits,
socioeconomic status, lifestyle, beliefs, and sensory deficits. Urine
output, gastric reflex, and bowel habits are significant only if a
disease affecting these functions is present.
93. C. I.V. cannula insertion. Caregivers must use surgical asepsis
when performing wound care or any procedure in which a sterile
body cavity is entered or skin integrity is broken. To achieve surgical
asepsis, objects must be rendered or kept free of all pathogens.
Inserting an I.V. cannula requires surgical asepsis because it
disrupts skin integrity and involves entry into a sterile cavity (a vein).
The other options are used to ensure medical asepsis or clean
technique to prevent the spread of infection. The GI tract isn’t sterile;
therefore, irrigating a nasogastric tube or a colostomy requires only
clean technique.
94. B. Pouring solution onto a sterile field cloth. Pouring solution onto a
sterile field cloth violates surgical asepsis because moisture
penetrating the cloth can carry microorganisms to the sterile field
via capillary action. The other options are practices that help ensure
surgical asepsis.
95. C. Impaired gas exchange. The client has a below-normal value for
the partial pressure of arterial oxygen (PaO2) and an above-normal
value for the partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide (PaCO2),
supporting the nursing diagnosis of Impaired gas exchange. ABG
values can’t indicate a diagnosis of Fluid volume deficit (or excess)
or Risk for deficient fluid volume. Metabolic acidosis is a medical,
not nursing, diagnosis; in any event, these ABG values indicate
respiratory, not metabolic, acidosis.
96. A. Stream seeding. Stream seeding is done by putting tilapia fry in
streams or other bodies of water identified as breeding places of the
Anopheles mosquito.
97. B. Severe dehydration. The order of priority in the management of
severe dehydration is as follows: intravenous fluid therapy, referral
to a facility where IV fluids can be initiated within 30 minutes,
Oresol/nasogastric tube, Oresol/orem. When the foregoing
measures are not possible or effective, tehn urgent referral to the
hospital is done.
98. A. Inability to drink. A sick child aged 2 months to 5 years must be
referred urgently to a hospital if he/she has one or more of the
following signs: not able to feed or drink, vomits everything,
convulsions, abnormally sleepy or difficult to awaken.
99. A. Sugar. R.A. 8976 mandates fortification of rice, wheat flour,
sugar and cooking oil with Vitamin A, iron and/or iodine.
100. A. Palms. The anatomic characteristics of the palms allow a
reliable and convenient basis for examination for pallor.