ATI LPN
ATI Fundamentals LPN Questions
Question 1 of 5
Which of the following is more life threatening?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: BP 80/50 is most life-threatening e.g., hypoperfusion risks failure vs. 180/100 (hypertension), 160/120 (severe), 90/60 (borderline). Nurses prioritize this e.g., fluids for stability, per hemodynamics.
Question 2 of 5
The nurse is aware that the normal frequency of bowel sounds is
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Normal bowel sounds are 5-35 gurgles/minute e.g., peristalsis per norms. Less (hypoactive), more (hyperactive) differ. Nurses count e.g., 1 minute for function, per standards.
Question 3 of 5
Which nursing actions will increase efficient management of client care and decrease the ramifications of the nursing shortage?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Addressing the nursing shortage and improving client care efficiency requires strategic actions that bolster the workforce and optimize practice. Pursuing postlicensure education enhances nurses' skills and adaptability, enabling them to handle diverse patient needs effectively, thus reducing strain from shortages. Becoming cross-trained in other hospital areas increases flexibility, allowing nurses to cover gaps and maintain care continuity across units. Implementing evidence-based clinical pathways standardizes care with proven methods, streamlining processes and minimizing errors, which is crucial when staffing is limited. Coordinating services before discharge ensures smoother transitions, reducing readmissions and workload. Taking early retirement, however, exacerbates the shortage by reducing experienced staff, counteracting efficiency goals. These proactive measures collectively strengthen care delivery, mitigate shortage impacts, and support a resilient healthcare system.
Question 4 of 5
A nurse observes that the past five clients referred from a community clinic have been treated for drug and/or alcohol overdose. Based on this information, the nurse assumes that the clinic specializes in the treatment of substance use. This is an example of what type of reasoning?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Inductive reasoning involves observing specific instances to form a general conclusion, as seen here. The nurse notes five overdose cases from a clinic and infers it specializes in substance use, moving from particular observations to a broader assumption. Deductive reasoning reverses this, applying a general rule (e.g., all overdose clinics specialize) to a specific case, not fitting here. General systems theory analyzes wholes and parts, irrelevant to this logic. The nursing process is a care method, not reasoning. Inductive reasoning's strength lies in pattern recognition, useful in nursing for hypothesis generation like identifying care trends but risks overgeneralization without further data. It shapes initial assessments, guiding deeper inquiry into the clinic's role, reflecting nurses' adaptive thinking in real-world settings.
Question 5 of 5
The nurse working in the community is assigned to the care of several clients. Which client(s) may require assistance to overcome barriers to accessing adequate care?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Barriers to healthcare access often hit vulnerable groups hardest, requiring nursing intervention. A migrant farm worker faces language, mobility, and economic hurdles, limiting care access e.g., no insurance or transport. An older adult living alone may struggle with mobility, health literacy, or isolation, delaying treatment. An unemployed client, lacking income or coverage, often skips care due to cost, risking worsening conditions. A student entering university or an employed pregnant client typically has fewer systemic barriers students may access campus health, employed clients insurance. Nursing must target the migrant, elderly, and jobless, addressing disparities poverty, age, ethnicity ensuring equitable care. This reflects nursing's equity mission, bridging gaps for those society sidelines, enhancing health outcomes through advocacy and resource linkage.