Vulnerability and Empowerment
Stress & Coping
Addiction
Anxiety
Kitchen Sink
100

Give an example of a health disparity.

Higher prevalence of a disease, higher incidence of a disease, shorter survival rate

100

During a regular home health visit to an elderly client, the nurse observes that the client has feelings of hopelessness and despair. The client states, "I am old, in pain and I just wish I could sleep and not wake up, but please don't tell anyone". How should the nurse respond?

a) "Don't worry, I won't tell anyone else."

b) "I'm sorry, but I can't keep that kind of secret."

c) "Let's talk about something to cheer you up."

d) "What can we do to help you feel better?"

b) "I'm sorry, but I can't keep that kind of secret."

Rationale: The patient is reporting a whish to be dead. That cannot be kept secret. The nurse would also need to assess active suicidal thoughts. 

100
  • Which of the following are examples of harm reduction strategies we might use for someone who is addicted to heroin?  Select all that apply.
  • Drug abuse resistance campaigns in schools
  • Supervised injection sites
  • Naloxone prescriptions
  • CPR training for caregivers
  • Incarceration


Ans:

  • Supervised injection sites
  • Naloxone prescriptions
  • CPR training for caregivers

Harm reduction techniques do not aim to prevent or treat drug addiction; instead, they aim to reduce the harm that drug addiction causes.  Buprenorphine therapy is a drug treatment meant to maintain abstinence; drug abuse resistance campaigns are primary prevention.

100

A client is experiencing a sever panic attack. Which nursing intervention would meet this client's immediate need?

a) Teach deep breathing relaxation exercises

b) Place the client in a trendelenburg position

c) Stay with the client and offer reassurance of safety

b) Administer the ordered buprenorphine to the client

Answer: Stay with the client and offer reassurance of safety

100

A provider is working with a pregnant client to identify an appropriate medication for medication assisted treatment of alcohol use disorder. Which order in the client's chart should the nurse question?

a) Acamprosate

b) Disulfiram

c) Naltrexone

d) Multivitamin

a) Acamprosate due to risk of fetal malformation

200

A public health nurse is working with the community of Flint, Michigan and references what tool to guide their interventions:

a) Social Ecological Model

b) Minnesota Intervention Wheel

c) Transactional Model

d) COWS

b) Minnesota Intervention Wheel

200

Individuals and populations are at higher risk for maladaptive coping when: Select all that apply.

  1. They have previous trauma
  2. ACES scores are high
  3. They practice regular self-care
  4. They have impaired cognition
  5. They have strong social support

They have previous trauma

ACES scores are high

They have impaired cognition

200

Which of the following drugs decreases the craving for alcohol and acts as an opiate receptor antagonist?

  • Acamprosate
  • Lorazepam
  • Buprenorphine
  • Naltrexone

Ans: Naltrexone

200

A client is prescribed lorazepam for an anxiety disorder. What client history should cause the nurse to question this order?

a) History of hypertension

b) History of opioid use disorder

c) History of depression

d) An allergy to morphine

b) History of opioid use disorder

200

Which of these patients should be highest priority (red tag) during triage for a wildfire?

A) 88 y/o client who is confused but has no visible injuries
B) 55 y/o client who is unresponsive, not breathing and has no pulse
C) 25 y/o client with an eye injury

D) 45 y/o client who has an open femur fracture, thready pulse and is unable to follow directions.

D) 45 y/o client who has an open femur fracture, thready pulse and is unable to follow directions.

300

A nurse is triaging clients after a disaster. What color should the following client be tagged?

A 40-year-old ambulating with a sprained ankle and bruising on their lower calf reporting pain 4/10.

Green

300

A client's is being transferred to a new job in a city far away from her close friends. She copes with her anxiety by explaining to her friends the advantages associated with the move. Which defense mechanism is the client using?

a) Intellectualization

b) Denial

c) Sublimation

d) Isolation

Intellectualization 

Rationale: 

Intellectualization: An attempt to avoid expressing actual emotions associated with a stressful situation by using the intellectual processes of logic, reasoning, & analysis.

Denial: Refusing to acknowledge the existence of a real situation or the feelings associated with it.

Sublimation: Rechanneling of drives or impulses that are personally or socially unacceptable into activities that are constructive. 

300

A pregnant client who is 30 weeks pregnant comes into the midwifery clinic for the first time.   She admits to a history of alcohol and opiate abuse.  She decided to come into the clinic shortly after she started using methamphetamine as well.  She tells the nurse, “I’m sorry, I know I should have come in sooner, but it has been so hard!”  Which of the following is the best response by the nurse?

  • “There may still be time to save your baby.”
  • “It’s about time you stopped thinking only about yourself.”
  • “Your life might be hard on you, but it’s doubly hard on the baby.”
  • “I’m glad you’re here.”
  • “Is the baby’s father with you?”

Ans:

  • “I’m glad you’re here.”

Answer A is alarmist, anxiety-provoking, and not based on assessment findings.  Answer B is judgmental (it is tempting to say this, but we need to bracket these thoughts for the sake of the mom and baby).  Answer C may be true to a degree, but is judgmental and shaming.  Answer E is an important question, but fails to center the pregnancy.  Only answer D projects a non-judgmental and welcoming attitude, which is crucial to the success of the care interaction.

300

A college students has been diagnosed with a panic disorder. Which of the following symptoms should a nurse expect this client to exhibit during a panic attack. Select all that apply

a) Bradycardia

b) Palpitations

c) Chest pain

d) Low body temperature

e) Fear of dying

b) Palpitations

c) Chest pain

e) Fear of dying

300

A client with a history of anxiety disorder enters the clinic complaining of fatigue, increased heart rate and nausea. Vital signs are BP 155/90, HR 118, RR 26. Based on this information, which statement below is correct:

a) The client is exhibiting signs of an exacerbation of their anxiety disorder

b) The client's signs and symptoms are due to an underlying medical condition

c) A physical examination is need to determine the cause of the client's symptoms

d) The client's needs a medication for their anxiety


c) A physical examination is need to determine the cause of the client's symptoms

400

Define health inequities

Health Inequities are differences in health that are avoidable, unfair, and unjust.

400

List three physiological symptoms of a stress response

Increased heart rate, BP, Cardiac output, Blood glucose

Immunosuppression, weakness, chest pain, difficulty breathing, GI disturbances etc

400

Which of the following is the priority nursing diagnosis for somebody experiencing delirium tremens (DTs)?

  • Fluid volume deficit
  • Impaired personal coping
  • Knowledge deficit
  • Nutrition- Less than body needs
  • Potential for injury

Ans: E- Potential for injury.  All of these diagnoses are relevant for a person who is suffering from       alcoholism. Potential for injury, however, is a priority diagnosis because of the nightmares,   agitation, impaired judgment, agitation, delusions, and seizures that are common with alcohol  withdrawal.  Of the others, fluid volume deficit is also acute, but immediate threats to safety demand that potential for injury be addressed first.

400

A nurse administered lorazepam to the four clients below. Which of the following clients should a nurse prioritize following administration of the medication:

a) A pregnant client who received the medication for anxiety

b) A client who is increasingly lethargic 30 minutes after medication administration

c) A client with a history of chronic respiratory issues who is no acute distress

d) A client who can't remember events after taking the medication

A client who is increasingly lethargic 30 minutes after medication administration is exhibiting signs of benzodiazepine overdose/toxicity

400

Which of these is not an example of a nurse effectively empowering a community?

  • The nurse enters a new community and decides immediately that she needs to launch a new initiative to improve vaccination rates.
  • The nurse spends time attending community events and creating relationships within the community, to find out what is important to them
  • The nurse helps facilitate and support community health initiatives that are led by community members
  • The nurse gathers feedback from the community to determine which inequities the nurse should address.
  • The nurse enters a new community and decides immediately that she needs to launch a new initiative to improve vaccination rates.
500

A team of public health nurses have been tasked with locating populations at risk of severe illness from COVID to provide education and connect them with resources. Which intervention will the public health nurses be implementing?

a) Case finding

b) Outreach

c) Social marketing

d) Surveillance

Answer: B Outreach

Rationale: 

  • Outreach- locates populations-of-interest or populations-at-risk and provides information about the nature of the concern, what can be done about it, and how services can be obtained.

  • Case Finding- locates individuals and families with identified risk factors and connects them to resources.

  • Surveillance- ongoing monitoring of diseases

  • Social market- Social marketing is a process that uses marketing principles and techniques to change target audience behaviors, to influence the knowledge, attitudes, values, beliefs, behaviors, & practices of the population of interest or, to benefit society as well as the individual. 

500

Describe the difference between emotion-focused and problem-focused coping.

Emotion-focused coping is a type of stress management that attempts to reduce negative emotional responses associated with stress. Problem-focused coping strategies involve activities directly aimed at eliminating the source of stress

500

The following effects of alcohol intoxication fall along a continuum from a low blood-alcohol level to a high blood-alcohol level.  List the effects in order of the blood-alcohol level at which they occur, from low to high.

  • Euphoria
  • Respiratory depression
  • Motor clumsiness
  • Emotional outbursts
  • Respiratory arrest


Ans: Euphoria (0.05%), motor clumsiness (0.08%), emotional outbursts (0.2%), respiratory depression (0.4%), respiratory arrest (0.5%)

500

Describe the mechanism of action of benzodiazepines and two indications for benzodiazepine use. 

Benzodiazepines enhance the inhibitory effects of GABA resulting in CNS depression

Anxiety, insomnia, seizures, muscle spasticity, alcohol withdrawal, anesthesia

500

Which of the following client should a nurse prioritize?

a) A client experiencing moderate levels of anxiety 

b) A client with a CIWA score of 20 

c) A client with a COWS score of 20 

d) A pregnant client with a substance use disorder  

The CIWA-Ar scores of less than 8 to 10 indicate minimal to mild withdrawal. Scores of 8 to 15 indicate moderate withdrawal (marked autonomic arousal); and scores of 15 or more indicate severe withdrawal (impending delirium tremens).

COWS: 5- 1 2 = mild; 1 3-24 = moderate; 25-36 = moderately severe; more than 36 = severe withdrawal  

The risk of complications is greater for Client B, compared to A C, or D.