Which of the following statement is NOT true about safety protocols?

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Question 1 of 5

Which of the following statement is NOT true about safety protocols?

Correct Answer: C

Rationale: Safety protocols reduce harm (A), guide care (B), are nursing (D) 'only for emergencies' (C) isn't true, used always, per standards. C's limit contradicts broad use, like Mr. Gary's routine care, making it untrue.

Question 2 of 5

Which of the following statement is TRUE about deductibles?

Correct Answer: B

Rationale: Deductibles are paid before insurance kicks in (B), per definition e.g., Mr. Gary's upfront cost. Not after (A), are insurance (C), not all (D) threshold-based. B truly defines deductibles' role, triggering coverage, making it correct.

Question 3 of 5

Which of the following clinical findings is expected in a patient who has undergone gastric lavage and prolonged vomiting?

Correct Answer: A

Rationale: Prolonged vomiting and gastric lavage lose stomach acid (HCl), causing metabolic alkalosis elevated pH, not decreased (acidosis). Bicarbonate rises as the body compensates, not oxygen or osmolarity, which are unrelated. Nurses monitor for alkalosis symptoms (e.g., tetany), correcting with fluids like saline, restoring acid-base balance disrupted by gastric content loss.

Question 4 of 5

What is an example of a subjective data?

Correct Answer: C

Rationale: Subjective data consists of information reported by the patient, reflecting their personal experiences, sensations, or perceptions, which cannot be directly measured by the nurse. The statement 'I feel pain when urinating' is a classic example, as it conveys the patient's subjective sensation of pain, reliant on their verbal report rather than objective observation. This type of data is crucial for understanding symptoms like pain or discomfort that lack visible signs. In contrast, a heart rate of 68 beats per minute is objective, measurable via pulse check. Yellowish sputum and noisy breathing are also objective, observable through sight and sound during assessment. Subjective data, like the patient's pain report, enhances the nurse's ability to assess holistic needs, guiding further inquiry or intervention, such as checking for urinary tract issues, making it distinct from observable, objective findings.

Question 5 of 5

Which is the most basic need according to Maslow's hierarchy of human needs?

Correct Answer: C

Rationale: Maslow's hierarchy ranks physiological needs air, water, food, shelter as the most basic, foundational level for survival. Without these, higher needs cannot be pursued; for instance, a patient struggling to breathe (physiological) won't prioritize self-esteem. Physical and psychological isn't a Maslow category; it blends levels imprecisely. Love and belonging (e.g., relationships) is third-tier, reliant on physiological and safety needs being met first. Self-actualization, the top tier, involves personal fulfillment, achievable only after all lower needs are satisfied. In nursing, prioritizing physiological needs like oxygen for a hypoxic patient ensures life-sustaining care precedes emotional or growth-oriented interventions. Maslow's model underscores this hierarchy's logic: physiological stability is the bedrock, making it the most basic need driving human behavior and nursing priorities.

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