ATI RN
ATI Maternal Newborn 2020 with NGN Questions
Extract:
The guardian of a newborn
Question 1 of 5
A nurse is reinforcing teaching about home safety precautions with the guardian of a newborn. Which of the following instructions should the nurse include?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Washing the face with a warm, soapy washcloth is safe, unlike high water temperature (scald risk), bumper pads (suffocation), or pillows (SIDS risk).
Extract:
A full-term newborn who is 1 day old
Question 2 of 5
A nurse is caring for a full-term newborn who is 1 day old. Which of the following laboratory findings should the nurse report to the provider?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Hgb 9.5 g/dL is low for a newborn, indicating possible anemia, requiring reporting, unlike normal platelets, glucose, or WBC counts.
Extract:
A client who is at 12 weeks of gestation
Question 3 of 5
A nurse is auscultating fetal heart tones with a Doppler device for a client who is at 12 weeks of gestation. Where should the nurse expect to auscultate the fetal heart tones?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: At 12 weeks, the uterus is low in the pelvis, so fetal heart tones are best heard above the left iliac crest, not in umbilical, suprapubic, or right abdominal areas.
Extract:
A newborn who was born at 39 weeks of gestation and is 36 hr old
Question 4 of 5
A nurse is assisting with the care of a newborn who was born at 39 weeks of gestation and is 36 hr old. Which of the following findings should the nurse report to the RN?
Correct Answer: B,D,F
Rationale: Dry mucous membranes (dehydration), yellow sclera (jaundice), positive Coombs (hemolysis risk), and caput succedaneum (jaundice/infection risk) require reporting, unlike unspecified glucose, respiratory rate, or intake/output.
Extract:
A group of clients who are pregnant
Question 5 of 5
A nurse is reinforcing teaching about risk factors for preeclampsia with a group of clients who are pregnant. Which of the following risk factors should the nurse include in the teaching?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Chronic hypertension significantly increases preeclampsia risk, unlike age 30, healthy BMI, or multiple pregnancies, which are less directly associated.