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TEST BANK For Pharmacology A Patient-Centered Nursing Process Approach, 11th Edition by Linda E. McCuistion | Verified Chapter's 1 - 58 | Complete $20.49   Add to cart

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TEST BANK For Pharmacology A Patient-Centered Nursing Process Approach, 11th Edition by Linda E. McCuistion | Verified Chapter's 1 - 58 | Complete

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TEST BANK For Pharmacology A Patient-Centered Nursing Process Approach, 11th Edition by Linda E. McCuistion | Verified Chapter's 1 - 58 | Complete TEST BANK For Pharmacology A Patient-Centered Nursing Process Approach, 11th Edition by Linda E. McCuistion | Verified Chapter's 1 - 58 | Complete

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  • January 26, 2022
  • October 16, 2023
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  • 2023/2024
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  • pharmacology
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TEST BANK For Pharmacology A Patient-Centered Nursing Process
Approach, 11th Edition by Linda E. McCuistion
| Verified Chapter's 1 - 58 | Complete

,Chapter 01: The Nursing Process and Patient-Centered Care
McCuistion: Pharmacology: A Patient-Centered Nursing Process Approach, 11th Edition

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. All of the following would be considered subjective data, EXCEPT:
a. Patient-reported health history
b. Patient-reported signs and symptoms of their illness
c. Financial barriers reported by the patient’s caregiver
d. Vital signs obtained from the medical record
ANS: D
Subjective data is based on what patients or family members communicate to the nurse. Patient-
reported health history, signs and symptoms, and caregiver reported financial barriers would be
considered subjective data. Vital signs obtained from the medical record would be considered
objective data.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension) TOP: Nursing Process: Planning
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

2. The nurse is using data collected to define a set of interventions to achieve the most desirable
outcomes. Which of the following steps is the nurse applying?
a. Recognizing cues (assessment)
b. Analyze cues & prioritize hypothesis (analysis)
c. Generate solutions (planning)
d. Take action (nursing interventions)
ANS: C
When generating solutions (planning), the nurse identifies expected outcomes and uses the
patient’s problem(s) to define a set of interventions to achieve the most desirable outcomes.
Recognizing cues (assessment) involves the gathering of cues (information) from the patient
about their health and lifestyle practices, which are important facts that aid the nurse in making
clinical care decisions. Prioritizing hypothesis is used to organize and rank the patient problem(s)
identified. Finally, taking action involves implementation of nursing interventions to accomplish
the expected outcomes.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension)
TOP: Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

3. A 5-year-old child with type 1 diabetes mellitus has had repeated hospitalizations for episodes of
hyperglycemia. The parents tell the nurse that they can’t keep track of everything that has to be
done to care for their child. The nurse reviews medications, diet, and symptom management with
the parents and draws up a daily checklist for the family to use. These activities are completed in
which step of the nursing process?
a. Recognizing cues (assessment)
b. Analyze cues & prioritize hypothesis (analysis)

, c. Generate solutions (planning)
d. Take action (nursing interventions)
ANS: D
Taking action through nursing interventions is where the nurse provides patient health teaching,
drug administration, patient care, and other interventions necessary to assist the patient in
accomplishing expected outcomes.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension)
TOP: Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

4. The nurse is preparing to administer a medication and reviews the patient’s chart for drug
allergies, serum creatinine, and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) levels. The nurse’s actions are
reflective of which of the following?
a. Recognizing cues (assessment)
b. Analyze cues & prioritize hypothesis (analysis)
c. Take action (nursing interventions)
d. Generate solutions (planning)
ANS: A
Recognizing cues (assessment) involves gathering subjective and objective information about the
patient and the medication. Laboratory values from the patient’s chart would be considered
collection of objective data.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension)
TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

5. Which of the following would be correctly categorized as objective data?
a. A list of herbal supplements regularly used provided by the patient.
b. Lab values associated with the drugs the patient is taking.
c. The ages and relationship of all household members to the patient.
d. Usual dietary patterns and food intake.
ANS: B
Objective data are measured and detected by another person and would include lab values. The
other examples are subjective data.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension)
TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

6. The nurse reviews a patient’s database and learns that the patient lives alone, is forgetful, and
does not have an established routine. The patient will be sent home with three new medications
to be taken at different times of the day. The nurse develops a daily medication chart and enlists
a family member to put the patient’s pills in a pill organizer. This is an example of which
element of the nursing process?
a. Recognizing cues (assessment)
b. Analyze cues & prioritize hypothesis (analysis)
c. Take action (nursing interventions)

, d. Generate solutions (planning)
ANS: C
Taking action (nursing interventions) involves education and patient care in order to assist the
patient to accomplish the goals of treatment.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application)
TOP: Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

7. A patient who is hospitalized for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) wants to go
home. The nurse and the patient discuss the patient’s situation and decide that the patient may go
home when able to perform self-care without dyspnea and hypoxia. This is an example of which
phase of the nursing process?
a. Recognizing cues (assessment)
b. Analyze cues & prioritize hypothesis (analysis)
c. Take action (nursing interventions)
d. Generate solutions (planning)
ANS: D
Generating solutions (planning) involves defining a set of interventions to achieve the most
desirable outcomes, which, for this patient, means being able to perform self-care activities
without dyspnea and hypoxia.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension) TOP: Nursing Process: Planning
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

8. A patient will be sent home with a metered-dose inhaler, and the nurse is providing teaching.
Which is a correctly written expected outcome for this process?
a. The nurse will demonstrate the correct use of a metered-dose inhaler to the patient.
b. The nurse will teach the patient how to administer medication with a metered-dose
inhaler.
c. The patient will know how to self-administer the medication using the metered-
dose inhaler.
d. The patient will independently administer the medication using the metered-dose
inhaler at the end of the session.
ANS: D
Expected outcomes must be patient-centered and clearly state the outcome with a reasonable
deadline and should identify components for evaluation.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application) TOP: Nursing Process: Planning
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

9. The nurse is generating solutions (planning) for a patient who has chronic lung disease and
hypoxia. The patient has been admitted for increased oxygen needs above a baseline of 2 L/min.
The nurse generates an expected outcomes stating, “The patient will have oxygen saturations of
>95% on room air at the time of discharge from the hospital.” What is wrong with this goal?
a. It cannot be evaluated.

, b. It is not measurable.
c. It is not patient-centered.
d. It is not realistic.
ANS: D
The expected outcome is not realistic because the patient is not usually on room air and should
not be expected to attain that expected outcome by discharge from this hospitalization.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application) TOP: Nursing Process: Planning
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

10. The nurse is developing a teaching plan for an elderly patient who will begin taking an
antihypertensive drug that causes dizziness and orthostatic hypotension. Which hypothesis
(problem) documented by the nurse is appropriate for this patient?
a. Deficient knowledge related to drug side effects.
b. Ineffective health maintenance related to age.
c. Readiness for enhanced knowledge related to medication side effects.
d. Risk for injury related to side effects of the medication.
ANS: D
This patient has an increased risk for injury because of drug side effects, so this is an appropriate
hypothesis (problem) to direct the type of care and follow-up the patient will receive.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application)
TOP: Nursing Process: Nursing Diagnosis
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

11. An older patient must learn to administer a medication using a device that requires manual
dexterity. The patient becomes frustrated and expresses lack of self-confidence in performing
this task. Which action will the nurse perform next?
a. Ask the patient to keep trying until the skill is learned.
b. Provide written instructions with illustrations showing each step of the skill.
c. Schedule multiple sessions and practice each step separately.
d. Teach the procedure to family members who can administer the medication for the
patient.
ANS: C
Nurses should be sensitive to patient’s level of frustration when teaching skills. In this case,
breaking the steps down into individual parts will help with this patient’s frustration level.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application) TOP: Nursing Process: Planning
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

12. A school-age child will begin taking a medication to be administered at 5 mL three times daily.
The child’s parent tells the nurse that, with a previous use of the drug, the child repeatedly forgot
to bring the medication home from school, resulting in missed evening doses. What will the
nurse recommend?
a. Encourage the child to be more responsible and that it is important to take the
medication as prescribed.

, b. Putting a note on the child’s locker to encourage the child to take responsibility for
medication administration.
c. Asking the provider if 7.5 mL may be taken in the morning and 7.5 mL may be
taken in the evening so that the correct amount is given daily.
d. Taking the noon dose to school every day and giving it to the school nurse to
administer.
ANS: C
For busy families with school-age children, it may be necessary to adjust the medication
schedule to one that fits their schedule. The nurse should ask the provider if a revised schedule is
possible. In this case, the most effective revised schedule would involve not taking the
medication while at school. Putting a note on the locker is not likely to be effective. It is not
correct to adjust the dose.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application)
TOP: Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention | Nursing Process: Planning
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

13. A high-school student regularly forgets to use a twice-daily inhaled corticosteroid to prevent
asthma flares and is repeatedly admitted to the hospital. The child’s parent tells the nurse that the
child has been told that forgetting to take the medication causes frequent hospitalizations. The
nurse will
a. encourage the child to take responsibility for taking the medication.
b. reinforce the need to take prescribed medications to avoid hospitalizations.
c. suggest putting the inhaler with the child’s toothbrush to use before brushing teeth.
d. suggest that the child’s parents administer the medication to increase compliance.
ANS: C
It is important to empower patients to take responsibility for managing medications. Putting the
medication with the toothbrush can help this child remember to use it. Telling the child to take
medications and reminding the child that failure to do so results in hospitalization is not working.
Asking the child’s parents to administer the medication does not empower the adolescent to take
responsibility.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application)
TOP: Nursing Process: Planning | Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

14. An adolescent patient who has acne is given a regimen of topical medications and an oral
antibiotic that generally clears up lesions to fewer than 10 within 6 to 8 weeks. At a 2-month
follow-up, the patient continues to have more than 25 lesions. The child’s parent affirms that the
child is using the medications as prescribed. Which statement below is correct for this patient to
evaluate the outcome?
a. “Goal of fewer than 10 lesions in 6 to 8 weeks is not met.”
b. “Goal that the medication will be effective is not met.”
c. “Goal that the patient will take medications as prescribed is not met.”
d. “Goal that the patient understands the medication regimen is not met.”
ANS: A

, All indications are that this patient is taking the medications and they are not effective. The first
statement is correct because it identifies a measurable desired outcome and a specific time frame.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application) TOP: Nursing Process: Evaluation
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

15. Which of the following would not be considered an important element of health teaching in drug
therapy?
a. Assess the patients’ health literacy skills.
b. Assess all of the drugs on the patients’ profile for possible drug interactions.
c. Avoid discussing potential side effects and adverse reactions with the patient to
avoid nonadherence.
d. Determine if the patient needs laboratory monitoring.
ANS: C
Potential side effects and adverse reactions should always be discussed with the patient so they
know what to report to their health care team should they occur. All other factors considerations
listed are important elements of health teaching.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application)
TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment | Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention
MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies
Chapter 02: Drug Development and Ethical Considerations
McCuistion: Pharmacology: A Patient-Centered Nursing Process Approach, 11th Edition

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. The nurse is obtaining consent from a subject newly recruited for a clinical drug trial that will
last for 6 months. All subjects will be given gift certificates for participating. One subject says,
“Well, I guess if the drug doesn’t work, I’ll just have to put up with the symptoms for 6 months.”
What will the nurse tell the subject?
a. “Participation for the duration of the study is required.”
b. “Participation may end at any time without penalty.”
c. “Withdrawal from the study may end at any time, but the gift certificate will not be
given.”
d. “You can request placement in the treatment group.”
ANS: B
All participants have the right to autonomy, which is the right to self-determination. Patients
have the right to refuse to participate or to withdraw from a study at any time without penalty.
Patients generally are not allowed to choose participation in either the treatment or the control
group.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension)
TOP: Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

,2. The nurse is assisting with a clinical drug trial in which the side effects of two effective drugs are
being compared. A patient who would benefit from either drug has elected to withdraw from the
study, and the nurse assists with the paperwork to facilitate this. This is an example of
a. autonomy.
b. beneficence.
c. justice.
d. veracity.
ANS: A
All participants have the right to autonomy, which is the right to self-determination. Patients
have the right to refuse to participate or to withdraw from a study at any time without penalty
even if the health care provider disagrees with that choice.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension) TOP: Nursing Process: N/A
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

3. During a clinical drug trial for a new medication, researchers note a previously unknown serious
adverse effect occurring in more than 50% of subjects. The study is discontinued. Which ethical
principle is being exercised?
a. Beneficence
b. Justice
c. Respect for persons
d. Veracity
ANS: A
Beneficence is the duty to protect subjects from harm. Once a serious adverse effect is noted and
it is determined that the benefits do not outweigh the risks of the study, researchers have an
ethical obligation to stop the study.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension) TOP: Nursing Process: N/A
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

4. In a 5-year clinical trial investigating a new cancer treatment, researchers note overwhelming
improvement in almost all of the subjects in the treatment group during the second year of the
trial. It is decided to stop the trial early and report the findings due to the overwhelmingly
beneficial effects. This decision was made based on which ethical principle?
a. Beneficence
b. Justice
c. Respect for persons
d. Veracity
ANS: B
The principle of justice requires that all people be treated fairly. Because the findings were
overwhelmingly positive, an ethical decision was made to stop the study early and report
findings so that additional people could gain benefit from the treatment.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension) TOP: Nursing Process: N/A
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

, 5. The nurse is enrolling subjects for a double-blind experimental study. One patient asks the nurse
to explain the role of the experimental group. The nurse will explain that subjects in the
experimental group in this type of study
a. are selected for participation in that group.
b. have unique baseline characteristics.
c. receive a placebo.
d. receive the experimental treatment being evaluated.
ANS: D
In a double-blind experimental study, subjects in the experimental group receive the treatment or
drug under study. They are randomly assigned and not selected. They should have similar
baseline characteristics to those in the control group. They do not receive a placebo.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension)
TOP: Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention: Patient Teaching
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

6. The nurse is obtaining signatures on consent forms for participation in a clinical drug trial. One
patient says, “I’m not sure I want to do this, but I need the cash.” The nurse will take which
action?
a. Ask the patient to clarify concerns.
b. Reinforce that cash is given to all subjects equally.
c. Report this statement to the lead investigator.
d. Review the elements of the study and obtain consent.
ANS: C
If a nurse suspects that a patient is being coerced to participate in the study, the nurse should
report this to the principal investigator. When a patient verbalizes participation based on a
financial reward, there is a potential element of coercion.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application)
TOP: Nursing Process: Nursing Intervention
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

7. Which of the following best describes preclinical in vivo testing?
a. A comparison of experimental and control data in animals.
b. A study conducted in a test tube in a laboratory.
c. A study that determines the effects of the experimental product in human
participants.
d. A study to assess the seriousness of the disease to be treated.
ANS: A
Preclinical in vivo testing is performed in animals or other non-human living organisms. In vitro
studies occur in test tubes. Safe therapeutic dose studies are part of clinical research. Prior to
clinical trials, an assessment is made of the disease and its seriousness.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension) TOP: Nursing Process: N/A
MSC: NCLEX: Management of Client Care

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