Jackson Webber VSIM Pre Quiz Answers and Rationales PDF

Title Jackson Webber VSIM Pre Quiz Answers and Rationales
Author Ashley Golden
Course Health Promotion for Families II
Institution Trident Technical College
Pages 4
File Size 127.5 KB
File Type PDF
Total Downloads 54
Total Views 193

Summary

The answers and Rationales to the required VSIM Prequiz....


Description

Quiz Answers 1 A patient weighing 40 lb has an order for phenobarbital 60 mg

twice daily. The safe dose range is 3 to 6 mg/kg/day. Is this order safe? Time Spent - 00:01:44

Your Response:No, the safe range is 54.6 to 109.2 mg/day. Rationale:Convert pounds to kilograms and round to the nearest 10th: 40 ÷ 2.2 = 18.2 kg. Multiply low end of dosage range by weight: 3 × 18.2 = 54.6 mg/day. Multiply high end of dosage range by weight: 6 × 18.2 = 109.2 mg/day. Safe dosage range equals 54.6 to 109.2 mg/day. Multiply the dose by the number of times administered per day: 60 × 2 = 120 mg/day. The ordered dose of phenobarbital 60 mg twice daily, or 120 mg per day, is above the range of 54.6 to 109.2 mg/dose, so the ordered dose is not safe to administer. Remediation: Ricci, S., Kyle, T., and Carman, S. Maternity and Pediatric Nursing, 4th Edition, p, 1215, Box 35.2 2 The nurse is teaching the parent of a 5-year-old patient about home safety and injury prevention. Which of the following principles is correct regarding safety for this age group? Time Spent - 00:00:55

Your Response:A forward-facing booster seat in the backseat with lap and shoulder belts should be used after reaching the car seat height restriction. Rationale:After reaching the car seat height restriction, all 5-year-olds should ride in a booster seat that uses both the shoulder and lap belts. The backseat is the safest place for the child to ride. Firearms should be kept in a locked cabinet with the ammunition stored separately. Preschoolers are not mature enough to ride a bicycle in the street and should ride on the sidewalk; bicycles should be ridden in the same direction as traffic. To prevent accidental ingestion, parents should never describe medications as candy. Remediation: Ricci, S., Kyle, T., and Carman, S. Maternity and Pediatric Nursing, 4th Edition, pp. 996-997 3

The nurse is admitting a pediatric patient with a known seizure history with an order to implement seizure precautions. Which of the following interventions should the nurse include in the patient's plan of care? (Select all that apply.) Time Spent - 00:00:40

Your Response: Keep bed in low position and remove objects from the bed, Keep oxygen and suction at the bedside, Supervise when ambulating or bathing Rationale:Basic seizure precautions should be implemented to provide a safe environment for the patient. The bed should be kept in low position and objects removed from the bed. Oxygen and suction should be readily available at the bedside. Supervision during bathing, ambulation, and other potentially unsafe activities helps to reduce the risk of an injury in the event that a seizure occurs. Although a ketogenic diet is a nonpharmacologic treatment for epilepsy, it would

not be appropriate for the nurse to implement this without an order from the provider. There is no need to insert a Foley catheter for a patient at risk for seizures. Remediation: Ricci, S., Kyle, T., and Carman, S. Maternity and Pediatric Nursing, 4th Edition, pp. 1342-1348 Ricci, S., Kyle, T., and Carman, S. Maternity and Pediatric Nursing, 4th Edition, pp. 1344-1345, Box 38.2 4 A nurse is reviewing lab results and notes that a 5-year-old patient's serum phenobarbital level is 8 mcg/mL. Phenobarbital is considered therapeutic at levels between 10 and 40 mcg/mL. What is the nurse's best interpretation of this data? Time Spent - 00:00:43

Your Response:Further assessment is needed regarding phenobarbital administration and compliance with therapy. Rationale:During the health history, the nurse needs to determine what medication the patient is taking, the current prescribed dose of medication, the frequency of administration, and the duration of therapy as well as whether the patient is complying with the prescribed medication regimen. There is not enough information provided in the description as it stands to conclude whether any of the other answers are correct. The nurse needs to know the last time the provider changed the child's medication dose, whether the child has had any recent weight changes, and when the provider last assessed the child's drug levels. Remediation: Ricci, S., Kyle, T., and Carman, S. Maternity and Pediatric Nursing, 4th Edition, pp. 1342-1349 5

During an admission assessment, the nurse notes a sudden onset of tonic contractions of the patient's entire body followed by clonic contractions alternating with relaxation of all muscle groups. What actions should the nurse take? (Select all that apply.) Time Spent - 00:00:52

Your Response: Check for a patent airway, Raise the side rails and remove any safety hazards Rationale:The nurse should ensure that the child has a patent airway and adequate oxygenation. The patient should be placed in side-lying position, not supine, to help maintain a patent airway and decrease the risk for aspiration. Implementation of seizure precautions, including rasing the side rails and removing any safety hazards, helps to keep the environment safe and reduce the risk of injury. Restraining the patient or placing anything in the mouth, such as a tongue blade, while the patient is actively seizing can cause further injury. The nurse should administer anticonvulsant medications as ordered to help stop and prevent further seizure activity, but administering oral medications during a seizure is not indicated due to risk of aspiration. Remediation: Ricci, S., Kyle, T., and Carman, S. Maternity and Pediatric Nursing, 4th Edition, pp. 1342-1348 6 The role of the pediatric nurse has many components. Which of the

following components includes the nurse's work with the

interdisciplinary health care team to integrate the needs of the patient and family into a coordinated plan of care? Time Spent - 00:00:36

Your Response:Collaborator Rationale:The pediatric nurse serves as a collaborator by working with the entire interdisciplinary health care team to integrate the needs of the patient and family into a coordinated plan of care. In the role of educator, the nurse instructs and counsels patients and their families about all aspects of health and illness. As an advocate, the nurse safeguards and advances the interests of patients and their families. The nurse ensures that the needs of the patient and family are met as a consultant through activities that include support group facilitation and working with the school nurse to plan the patient's care. Remediation: Ricci, S., Kyle, T., and Carman, S. Maternity and Pediatric Nursing, 4th Edition, pp. 63-64 7 The nurse is evaluating a school-aged patient brought in for a recent decline in academic performance. The parent reports that the patient has been doing poorly in school and states, "He wastes time staring at the wall and daydreaming instead of completing his work." The nurse suspects that the patient may be experiencing which type of seizure activity? Time Spent - 00:00:35

Your Response:Absence Rationale:Absence seizures consist of sudden cessation of activity combined with a blank facial expression. This type of seizure lasts less than 30 seconds and can occur multiple times during the day. Because of the subtle changes in patient behavior, absence seizure activity may not be recognized or may be perceived falsely as inattentiveness. Myoclonic seizures are characterized by sudden, brief, massive muscle jerks that may involve the whole body or one body part. Simple partial seizures are characterized by clonic or tonic movements involving the face, neck, and extremities and can include sensory signs such as numbness, tingling, paresthesia, or pain. Atonic seizures involve a sudden loss of muscle tone, which in children may be only a sudden drop of the head. Remediation: Ricci, S., Kyle, T., and Carman, S. Maternity and Pediatric Nursing, 4th Edition, pp. 1342-1349 8

A nurse is caring for a preschool-aged patient experiencing generalized tonic-clonic seizures. This patient is at greatest risk for which of the following complications? (Select all that apply.) Time Spent - 00:01:30

Your Response: Incontinence, Aspiration, Head trauma Rationale:A child with altered level of consciousness may not be able to manage his or her secretions and is at risk for aspiration and ineffective airway clearance. Because of the loss of consciousness and rhythmic clonic contractions associated with this type of seizure, the patient is at risk for head trauma. Loss of sphincter control, leading to incontinence, is another

complication associated with this type of seizure. Cardiac arrest and anaphylactic shock are not complications commonly associated with tonic-clonic seizures....


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