ATI LPN
ATI Fundamentals Proctored Exam LPN Questions
Question 1 of 5
A nurse provides care to clients of a community clinic that serves a large immigrant population. Which intervention reflects primary prevention for this group?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Primary prevention stops illness before it starts, vital for immigrants facing unique risks. Providing vaccinations like measles or flu shots builds immunity, preventing outbreaks in a group often under-vaccinated due to access or prior country norms, a top nursing action in clinics. Screening for tuberculosis is secondary, catching disease early, common in immigrant health but not preventive. Referring hypertension cases or teaching diabetic foot care is tertiary, managing existing conditions, not averting onset. Vaccinations align with primary prevention's proactive stance data shows they cut infectious disease rates in such populations addressing environmental and social vulnerabilities. Nursing leverages this to protect community health, ensuring immigrants, often in crowded settings, dodge preventable illnesses, a practical, impactful step for this clinic's focus.
Question 2 of 5
The nurse notes small, pimple-like pustules all over the newborn's body. When charting the integumentary assessment of this newborn, which normal finding does the nurse note?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Small, pimple-like pustules on a newborn's body suggest erythema toxicum (C), a benign, self-limiting rash common in the first week of life, often with erythematous macules and pustules. Strawberry hemangiomas (A) are vascular growths, not pustular. Port-wine stains (B) are flat, purple birthmarks. Telangiectatic nevi simplex (D) are salmon-colored patches, not pustules. C is correct. Rationale: Erythema toxicum affects up to 70% of newborns, caused by an immune response, resolving without treatment, distinct from vascular or permanent lesions, aligning with normal neonatal skin findings.
Question 3 of 5
The nurse assesses a client at 40 weeks gestation and notes regular contractions and cervical dilatation of $6 \mathrm{~cm}$. Which actions by the nurse are important during this stage? Select all that apply.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: At 40 weeks gestation with 6 cm cervical dilatation, the client is in active labor. Monitoring the fetus (D) is critical to assess for distress via heart rate patterns, a priority in labor management. Administering an epidural (A) requires an order and isn't universally needed. Ensuring hydration (B) supports labor but isn't the top action. Encouraging voiding (C) prevents bladder distension but is secondary. D is chosen. Rationale: Fetal monitoring detects hypoxia or distress, guiding interventions like position changes or delivery, per ACOG standards, outweighing comfort or supportive measures in immediacy during active labor.
Question 4 of 5
A client attached to mechanical ventilation suddenly becomes restless and pulls out the tracheostomy tube. Which is the nurse's priority intervention?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: If a tracheostomy tube is dislodged, checking for spontaneous breathing (D) is the priority to assess airway patency and oxygenation need. Preparing for reintubation (A) or calling teams (B, C) follows. D is correct. Rationale: Assessing breathing determines if immediate reinsertion or oxygenation is urgent, guiding next steps per respiratory emergency standards, ensuring patient stability first.
Question 5 of 5
The nurse is reviewing the arterial blood gas results of an assigned client. Which arterial blood gases indicate metabolic alkalosis?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Metabolic alkalosis features high pH (>7.45) and elevated HCO3- (>26 mEq/L) with normal Pco2 (35-45 mm Hg). Option D (pH 7.48, Pco2 40, HCO3- 36) fits this, indicating excess base. A is respiratory acidosis. B is normal. C is compensated. D is correct. Rationale: High HCO3- from vomiting or diuretics causes alkalosis, uncompensated here, per ABG interpretation principles.