7.Answers will vary with student’s experiences.
8.Answers will vary with student’s experiences.
9.Sample answers:
a.“I’m Nurse Brown and I’ll be your nurse this
week. What would you like to accomplish with
this time, and how can I help you get through
this period?”
b.“What family members do you expect to see
while you are here? Would you trust them to
make decisions about your care if you were
unable to do so yourself?”
c. “What are your goals, hopes, and dreams in life?
How do you hope to accomplish them? How
will your hospitalization affect these goals?”
d.“Tell me about your life at home/school/work.
Is there anyone or anything in particular that
you will miss during your recuperation?”- a.Do I know the legal boundaries of my practice?
 b.Do I own my personal strengths and weaknesses
 and seek assistance as needed?
 c. Am I knowledgeable about, and respectful of,
 patient rights?
 d.Does my documentation provide a legally
 defensible account of my practice?
 REFLECTIVE PRACTICE USING CRITICAL
 THINKING SKILLS
 Sample Answers
 1.How might the nurse use blended nursing skills to
 respond to this patient situation?
 The nurse should investigate the reasons Ms. Horvath
 is not cooperating with the teaching session on
 wound care for her child. Possible reasons include
 fear, fatigue, lack of knowledge of possible con-
 sequences if the wound is not kept clean (i.e.,
 infection), and being overwhelmed with family
 responsibilities. The nurse should use blended skills
 to advocate for this family and seek out possible
 resources (such as help from relatives or the
 community) to help remedy this situation.
 2.What would be a successful outcome for this
 patient and her family?
 Ms. Horvath states the consequences of improper
 wound care and demonstrates changing the dress-
 ings on her daughter’s wound.
 3.What intellectual, technical, interpersonal, and/or
 ethical/legal competencies are most likely to bring
 about the desired outcome?
 Intellectual: knowledge of the science of nursing
 care related to wound care
 Technical: ability to competently change dressings
 on a wound and teach this skill to the caretaker
 Interpersonal: ability to counsel Ms. Horvath who is
 finding it difficult to respond to the challenge of
 caring for her daughter at home
 Ethical/Legal: commitment to patient safety and
 quality care, including the ability to report problem
 situations immediately
4.What resources might be helpful for Ms. Horvath?
Counseling services, community services, help from
relatives, printed materials on wound careCHAPTER 12
PRACTICING FOR NCLEX
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS
1.d 2.c 3.c 4.a 5.c
6.b 7.d 8.d
ALTERNATE-FORMAT QUESTIONS
Multiple Response Questions
1.a, d, e
2.c, d, f
3.b, c, f
4.a, d, f
Prioritization Question
1.Copyright © 2011 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Study Guide for Fundamentals of Nursing:ANSWER KEY 341
bedfacDEVELOPING YOUR KNOWLEDGE BASE
FILL-IN-THE-BLANKS
1.Patient support people, patient record
2.Database nursing assessment
3.Validation
4.Reflective
5.Focused
6.Time-lapsed
7.Minimum data set
MATCHING EXERCISES
1.f 2.j 3.e 4.c 5.g
6.i 7.k 8.a 9.b 10.d
11.a 12.b 13.a 14.a 15.b
16.b
SHORT ANSWER- a.Make a judgment about a patient’s health status.
 b.Make a judgment about a patient’s ability to
 manage his/her own healthcare.
 c. Make a judgment about a patient’s need for
 nursing.
 d.Refer the patient to a physician or other health-
 care professional.
 e.Plan and deliver individualized, holistic nursing
 care that draws on the patient’s strengths.
- a.Patient: Most patients are willing to share infor-
 mation when they know it is helpful in planning
 their care.
 b.Support people: Family members, friends, and
 caregivers are helpful sources of data when a
 patient is a child or has a limited capacity to
 share information with the nurse.
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