- 1. C -Administer between meals to help enhance absorption is best. Also providing juice with vitamin C can be used to help with absorption.
- 2. B- This medication will prevent alveoli from collapsing.
- 3. C- Dilated cardiomyopathy is most associated as a pregnancy related complication.
- 4. A-Fluid replacement is most important, some of you picked respiratory support but this patient is unlikely to be in any respiratory distress. Pain also is hardly a priority but the fluid replacement is major due to the hemorrhaging the abdominal cavity due to the ruptured tube.
- 5. A- Administer oxygen and place patient in high fowler’s position. The patient has already been assessed now time for the intervention!
- 6. B- The client with a right lobe brain tumor complaining of vomiting. This is the priority because the vomiting will increase intracranial pressure which could depress the patient’s respirations.
- 7. B- A client with a knife wound to the chest. This is an airway consideration.
- 8. D-Approximately one foot slightly behind the client’s weak side. NURSE on weak side slightly behind for support, CANE on strong side.
- 9. B- High pitched sounds
- 10. A- A.C. (If you guessed look it up!)
- 11. C- Mechanical soft
- 12. A-The right side- Same principle as assisting with a cane. Did you get it right?
- 13. C- Local dry heat application
- 14. A & C- you would not do any of the others
- 15. D- Dry mucous membranes- If a patient has reduced antidiuretic hormone (ADH), it usually results in increased water loss in urine. The client may show signs of decreased fluid volume (dehydration), including dry mucous membranes poor skin tugor etc.
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