ATI LPN
LPN Fundamentals Practice Test Questions
Question 1 of 5
John has a fever of 38.5 Deg. Celsius. It surges at around 40 Degrees and go back to 38.5 degrees 6 times today in a typical pattern. What kind of fever is John having?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Remittent fever fluctuates above normal (38.5-40°C) e.g., typhoid without dropping to baseline. Relapsing (normal intervals), intermittent (to normal), and constant (stable) differ. Nurses track this e.g., six swings for diagnosis, per fever patterns.
Question 2 of 5
Which of the following is among an ideal way of collecting a urine specimen for culture and sensitivity?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Discarding initial urine midstream e.g., clears contaminants for C&S, unlike clean container (basic), volume (standard), preservation (post). Nurses ensure e.g., instruction for sterility, per microbiology.
Question 3 of 5
The nurse expects which of the following assessment findings from a client with colostomy who had the surgery yesterday?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A red stoma is expected post-colostomy e.g., healthy tissue day one. Pale/dry (ischemia), green (later), no drainage (obstruction) differ. Nurses expect e.g., moist red for healing, per ostomy norms.
Question 4 of 5
The need for university-based nursing education programs was brought to light during which important historical time?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The evolution of nursing education reflects historical shifts in healthcare demands, and World War II marked a significant turning point. During this period, Esther Lucile Brown's 1940s report highlighted the need for nursing education to move from hospital-based training to colleges and universities, arguing it would elevate the profession's standards and scientific foundation. This shift was driven by the war's demand for skilled nurses in both military and civilian roles, exposing the limitations of earlier apprenticeship models. The Spanish-American War saw nursing in its infancy, while World War I, despite Florence Nightingale's influence, still struggled with professionalization. The Civil War predates these developments, with nursing largely informal. World War II's crisis needs catalyzed a formal push for university-based programs, shaping modern nursing education to meet complex healthcare challenges with a stronger academic base, a legacy that continues to influence the profession today.
Question 5 of 5
A nurse who works in a pediatric practice assesses the developmental level of children of various ages to determine their psychosocial development. These assessments are based on the work of:
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Erik Erikson's theory of psychosocial development underpins pediatric assessments of children's growth, focusing on eight stages tied to age-specific conflicts like trust versus mistrust in infancy. In a pediatric practice, a nurse uses this to gauge if a child's social and emotional milestones align with norms, assessing interactions or independence. Erikson integrates social, biological, and environmental factors, offering a lifespan lens ideal for children. Jean Watson's caring theory emphasizes interpersonal healing, not development. Martha Rogers' model centers on energy fields and client-environment interplay, less stage-focused. Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs prioritizes physical and psychological needs hierarchically, not age-based progression. Erikson's framework provides nurses a structured, age-sensitive tool to evaluate and support psychosocial health, critical for tailoring care to young clients' evolving capabilities.