Definitions
Assessment Findings
Glasgow Scale
Interventions
Random!
100

Process of acquiring knowledge & understanding through thought, experience & senses

Cognition

100

What are things that cause impaired cogniton?

Stroke, drugs, infection, diabetes, hypotension, cyanosis

100

A 5-year-old  is awake and neurologically intact in all four extremities. When you ask what happened, she tells you she fell, and then she tells you about her Barbie

Eyes: 4

Verbal: 5

Motor: 6

Total: 15

100

What is the #1 intervention for impaired cognition?

FALL PREVENTION

100
What should you use for assessment of a child's cognition?

Piaget's Stages of Development

200

The loss of the ability to speak or understand language

Aphasia

200

What is the most obvious S/S of impaired cognition?

Comatose/ decreased response to pain stimulus

200

 When you apply pressure to injury, he extends his arms and legs and moans in pain shows no other response.

Eyes: 1

Verbal: 2

Motor: 2

Total: 5

200

What is the primary clinical management for impaired cognition?

prevention/ education

200

What happens in Piaget's preoperational stage ?

(2-7 years) Child learns through pretend play

300

The simultaneous use of multiple drug to treat a single ailment or condition

Polypharmacy

300

High risk factors for impaired cognition in elderly

Polypharmacy and INFECTION 

300

An infant moves spontaneously towards an object and follows it, smiling and orienting towards interesting sounds. The infant opens their eyes spontaneously.

Eyes: 4

Verbal: 5

Motor: 6

Total: 15

300

What is the secondary clinical management?

GCS, imaging

300

What happens in Piaget's formal operational stage of development?

(11 & UP) Child gains deductive reasoning. (CAUSE & EFFECT)

400

How humans perceive or adapt to new information

Assimilation

400

S/S of altered cognition

anxiety, difficulty concentrating, sluggish/fixed pupils, no response to painful stimuli, comatose 

400

A child withdraws from touch, can only sometimes be consoled and is often agitated. He opens his eyes in response to pain but not to speech.

Eyes: 5

Verbal: 4

Motor: 2

Total:11

400

What is the tertiary clinical management?

Nutrition, cognitive activities (brain games)
400

Gerontologic considerations

Decreased nerve conduction

Altered temperature regulation

Decreased perception of pain

Decreased senses

Decreased mental processing time

More likely to become confused with illness before other manifestations


500

The development and alterations of mental representations one encounters a new situation.

Accommodation

500

An infant moves her arm when touched, is inconsistently inconsolable and moans, but has no other response.

Eyes: 1

Verbal: 2

Motor: 5

Total: 8

500

Clinical management for nurses

SAFETY FIRST

1.Fall precautions

2. Airways

3. Reduce polypharmacy

4.Reorient (person, place, time)

5.Allow decision making when able to

6. Provide consistent routines

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