Medication Management
Metabolic Regulation
Wild Card
Quality and Safety
Teaching and Learning
100

The goal A1C level for an average diabetic adult. 

What is less than 7. 
100

The type of diabetes mellitus that is most associated with genetic history. 

What is Type 2 DM?

While Type 1 usually has onset in childhood, the cause is usually autoimmune/insidious, while Type 2 can be caused by a combination of genetic and lifestyle factors or by medications. 

100

Patients with this learning barrier are more likely to skip important preventative measures, more likely to have chronic conditions, less able to manage chronic conditions, and experience increased hospital visits and admissions. 

What is low health literacy? 

100

True or False: one of the 2024 National Patient Safety Goals is to improve health care equity. 

What is TRUE? 

Goal 16 addresses health care equity, stating that although health care disparities are often viewed through the lens of social injustice, they are primarily a quality and safety concern. 

For example, imagine how education and literacy levels or food insecurity may impact a patient's ability to safely manage diabetes. 

100

True or False: Providers are legally responsible for educating patients while it is optional for nurses to supplement this education. 

What is FALSE! Nurses are legally responsible for providing education to patients. 
200

Identifying a new drug for treating brain cancer is an example of applied science. True or false. 

False. This is an example of pure science. 

Applied science could involve choosing between two cancer drugs by identifying which will have the least side effects to foster compliance. 


200

The name of the abnormal breathing pattern that can be noted in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis 

What are Kussmaul respirations? 

200

_______  _________ is the leading cause of medical errors, as opposed to individual negligence or other causes. 

What is systematic dysfunction? 

200

Two alternatives to using restraints. 

Safety attendant, redirection, family at bedside, low-stimulation environment, bed-alarm, etc. 

200

Sensory deficits, low literacy, lack of motivation, anxiety, and stress are examples of this. 

What are learner-related learning barriers?

300

A category of medication that makes the liver less sensitive to insulin and can lead to medication induced diabetes. 

What are corticosteroids?

300

"Three Ps" that are symptoms of DM type 1. 

What are Polydipsia, Polyphagia, and Polyuria. 

300

True or False: Confrontation can be a technique used for therapeutic communication.

What is True? However, passive/aggressive responses and arguing are NOT therapeutic communication techniques. 

300

A _____________ analysis is a widely known process used by health professionals to learn how and why errors occurred

What is a Root Cause Analysis? 

300

The primary domain of learning utilized when a nurse helps a patient learn to use crutches. 

What is the Psychomotor Domain? 

400

A medication that decreases hepatic glucose production, decreases intestinal absorption of glucose, and is used as a first line treatment for Type 2 DM

What is Metformin (Glucophage) 

400

A list of four potential long-term complications of Diabetes Mellitus. 

What is retinopathy, nephropathy, sensory and motor neuropathy, gastroparesis, amputation secondary to infection, erectile dysfunction, hearth disease, hypertension, stroke, altered lipid metabolism.

400

A _______ event is an unexpected occurrence involving death or serious physical or psychological injury or the risk thereof

What is a Sentinel Event

400

True or False: Medical errors cause nearly as many deaths globally each year as malaria does.

What is FALSE? Medical errors cause more deaths each year globally than HIV, TB, and Malaria combined.

400

The primary domain of learning utilized when a nurse helps a patient learn when to have their lab values checked to monitor a new medication.  

What is the cognitive domain? 

500

The timeframe in which Insulin Lispro peaks. 

What is 30 minutes to 3 hours? 

500

Three possible findings that may suggest a patient is experiencing the somogyi effect.

What are headache, night sweats, nightmares, high BG in the morning, low BG between 2 and 4 am.

500

A list of four techniques that can be used as part of therapeutic communication:

  • Active listening
  • Sharing observations
  • Sharing empathy
  • Sharing hope
  • Sharing humor
  • Sharing feelings
  • Using touch
  • Using silence
  • Providing information
  • Clarifying
  • Focusing
  • Paraphrasing
  • Validation
  • Asking relevant questions
  • Summarizing
  • Self-disclosure
  • Confrontation

  • NOT the below
  • Asking personal questions
  • Giving personal opinions
  • Changing the subject
  • Automatic responses
  • False reassurance
  • Sympathy
  • Asking for explanations
  • Approval or disapproval
  • Defensive responses
  • Passive or aggressive responses
  • Arguing
500

These are four of the six aims of the IOM for improvement of care: 

What are:

Safe, Timely, Effective, Efficient, Equitable, and Patient-Centered 

500

A counseling and educational technique that is focused on patient goals and is goal directed and patient centered. 

What is motivational interviewing? 

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