This topic contains a solution. Click here to go to the answer

Author Question: The nurse admits a 9-month-old for a well-baby checkup. The mother tells the nurse she has been ... (Read 36 times)

NClaborn

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 560
The nurse admits a 9-month-old for a well-baby checkup. The mother tells the nurse she has been adding foods one at a time to the diet, and hasn't encountered any problems. This morning, she noticed a fine, raised rash around the child's mouth.
 
  The nurse asks the mother: 1. Have you introduced any new foods into the diet within the last 24 hours?
  2. Have you changed soaps or detergents recently?
  3. Has there been any drainage from the area?
  4. Does the child drool excessively when sleeping?

Question 2

A postoperative client has a Salem sump nasogastric tube in place. The tube is to be clamped for four hours, reconnected to low intermittent suction for one hour, and then clamped again for four hours.
 
  The client reports increasing nausea after the tube has been clamped for three hours. An appropriate action by the nurse at this time is to: 1. Irrigate the nasogastric tube with 30 milliliters of normal saline.
  2. Recheck the position of the nasogastric tube by aspirating for stomach contents.
  3. Unclamp the nasogastric tube and reconnect it to low, intermittent suction.
  4. Encourage the client to take deep breaths to decrease nausea, and maintain the clamped tube.



Related Topics

Need homework help now?

Ask unlimited questions for free

Ask a Question
Marked as best answer by a Subject Expert

jaymee143

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 341
Answer to Question 1

1
Rationale: The nurse would first determine if there have been any new foods added to the child's diet before questioning about other changes, because food allergies commonly arise when they are introduced into the diet.

Answer to Question 2

3
Rationale: Nausea indicates that gastric motility has not returned sufficient to prevent collection of secretions in the stomach and duodenum. The tube should be reconnected to low, intermittent suction, and the nurse should document the client's response to clamping. Irrigating the tube will increase the client's discomfort, and could result in vomiting. Checking tube placement would be indicated if the client were nauseated while connected to suction, but is not indicted in this situation. Encouraging deep breathing might make the client feel better for a minute but will not resolve the issue causing the sensation, and the tube must be connected to suction.




NClaborn

  • Member
  • Posts: 560
Reply 2 on: Jul 22, 2018
Wow, this really help


daiying98

  • Member
  • Posts: 354
Reply 3 on: Yesterday
Great answer, keep it coming :)

 

Did you know?

Patients who have been on total parenteral nutrition for more than a few days may need to have foods gradually reintroduced to give the digestive tract time to start working again.

Did you know?

Every flu season is different, and even healthy people can get extremely sick from the flu, as well as spread it to others. The flu season can begin as early as October and last as late as May. Every person over six months of age should get an annual flu vaccine. The vaccine cannot cause you to get influenza, but in some seasons, may not be completely able to prevent you from acquiring influenza due to changes in causative viruses. The viruses in the flu shot are killed—there is no way they can give you the flu. Minor side effects include soreness, redness, or swelling where the shot was given. It is possible to develop a slight fever, and body aches, but these are simply signs that the body is responding to the vaccine and making itself ready to fight off the influenza virus should you come in contact with it.

Did you know?

The average person is easily confused by the terms pharmaceutics and pharmacology, thinking they are one and the same. Whereas pharmaceutics is the science of preparing and dispensing drugs (otherwise known as the science of pharmacy), pharmacology is the study of medications.

Did you know?

Signs and symptoms of a drug overdose include losing consciousness, fever or sweating, breathing problems, abnormal pulse, and changes in skin color.

Did you know?

The Food and Drug Administration has approved Risperdal, an adult antipsychotic drug, for the symptomatic treatment of irritability in children and adolescents with autism. The approval is the first for the use of a drug to treat behaviors associated with autism in children. These behaviors are included under the general heading of irritability and include aggression, deliberate self-injury, and temper tantrums.

For a complete list of videos, visit our video library