Nursing Process
Infection Control & Safety
Wounds
Medication Administration
Immobility & Oxygenation
100

This type of data is obtained from your patient and are verbal descriptions of their health problems. Including feelings, perceptions, and self reports.  

Subjective Data 

100

Any manual method or physical or mechanical device, material, or equipment that immobilizes or reduces the ability of a patient to move his or her arms, legs, body, or head freely. 

Restraints

What are some alternatives to restraints?

What are the legal implications when using restraints?

100

What risk factors predispose a patient to a pressure injury?

Immobility, impaired sensory perceptions, moisture, alteration in level of consciousness, shear, and friction

100

This occurs when 2 medications combined have a greater effect than when given separately. 

Synergistic Effect 

100

How can the nurse prevent atelectasis postop?

Instruction of incentive spirometry, coughing and deep breathing, Q2 turns, and early ambulation.

200

Observations and measurements of a patient's health status. Example would be vital signs. 

Objective Data

200

How can a nurse prevent falls in the hospital setting?

Call light within reach, proper patient footwear when ambulating, remove clutter, use of gait belt, use of appropriate assistive device such as a walker, proper fall risk assessment, bed/ chair alarm, fall risk noted to staff, wrist band, close to the nurses station,etc

200
In this stage of a pressure ulcer, subcutaneous fat may be present, but bone, tendon or muscle are NOT exposed. Slough may be present but does not obscure the depth of the tissue loss. May include undermining and tunneling. 

Stage 3/ Full-Thickness Skin Loss 

200

What are the 6 rights to a med pass?

Right patient

Right dose

Right route

Right time

Right medication

Right documentation

200
Inadequate tissue oxygenation at the cellular level. S/S include restlessness, decreased level of consciousness (LOC), dizziness, and behavioral changes. Can be caused by decreased Hgb or decreased diffusion of oxygen from the alveoli to the blood as in pneumonia 

Hypoxia

300

Third step in the nursing process and involves collaborating with the patient, their family, and the health care team. 

Planning 

300

This is a protective vascular reaction that delivers fluid, blood products, and nutrients to an area of injury.

Inflammation

300

Healthy tissues that is red, moist and composed of new blood vessels, the presence of which indicates progression toward wound healing. 

Granulation Tissue

300

Some medications are readily absorbed after being placed under the tongue to dissolve. This is an example of what type of administration?

Sublingual

Nursing Considerations: Instruct patient not to swallow medication or drink anything until the medication is completely dissolved.

300

Process of moving gases into and out of the lungs. 

Ventillation

400

This is a preprinted document containing orders for routine therapies, monitoring guidelines, and/or diagnostic procedures for specific patients with identical clinical problems. ( Implementation phase) 

Standing order 

400

The most effective basic technique in preventing and controlling the transmission of infection is what? 

Hand hygiene

400

This is when protrusion of visceral organs occurs through a wound opening

Evisceration

Nursing considerations: sterile gauzed soaked in sterile saline over the extruding tissues to reduce chances of bacterial invasion and drying of the tissues. Alerts surgery immediately and make patient NPO

400
Lowest level of medication concentration is called the what?

The trough

Example: Vancomycin 

400

The easiest intervention to maintain or improve join mobility for patients and one that can be coordinated with other activities is the use of what?

ROM exercise

What is the difference between passive and active ROM?

500

This part of the nursing process includes 2 steps: collection of information from a primary source and the interpretation and validation of data.

Assessment 

500

This type of precaution is used for the colonization or infection with multi-drug resistant organisms such as VRE, MRSA, and C-Diff. Includes gloves, gowns, and private room or cohort of patients (depending on agency policy)

Contact Precautions

500

The most effective way to prevent a pressure injury 

Q2 turns

500

The nurse is unclear about a medication order from the provider. What is the nurse's next step. 

Call provider and clarify the order. 

500

Drop of blood pressure greater than 20 mm Hg in systolic pressure or 10 mm Hg in diastolic pressure and include symptoms of dizziness, light-headedness, nausea, tachycardia, pallor, or fainting. 

Orthostatic hypotension

What would be the nursing interventions associated with this?

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