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Author Question: Which agent would the nurse administer to prevent the absorption of a poison that the client ... (Read 16 times)

luvbio

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Which agent would the nurse administer to prevent the absorption of a poison that the client ingested?
 
  1. Syrup of ipecac
  2. Sodium bicarbonate
  3. Charcoal
  4. Furosemide (Lasix)

Question 2

At a local health fair, the community nurse is educating the public on poison-control strategies. Which strategy should the nurse emphasize as the most important to follow?
 
  1. Keeping the Poison Control Hotline number handy
  2. Preventing potential household poisoning
  3. Identifying household poisons
  4. Maintaining a stockpile of selected antidotes



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vboyd24

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Answer to Question 1

Correct Answer: 3
Rationale 1: Though once considered routine procedure, this method of poison management is now considered ineffective.
Rationale 2: Sodium bicarbonate does not prevent the absorption of a poison.
Rationale 3: Charcoal is used to prevent absorption of the poison.
Rationale 4: Furosemide (Lasix) does not prevent the absorption of a poison.
Global Rationale: Charcoal is used to prevent absorption of the poison. Though once considered routine procedure, syrup of ipecac is now considered ineffective. Sodium bicarbonate and furosemide do not prevent absorption.

Answer to Question 2

Correct Answer: 2
Rationale 1: Making sure the Poison Control Hotline number is always accessible is important, but another strategy is more critical.
Rationale 2: Educating the community about accidental poisoning is an important part of community health nursing. Prevention is the first line of defense against accidental poisoning.
Rationale 3: Identification of household poisons is important but is not the most effective strategy.
Rationale 4: Storing antidotes is not recommended for the public.
Global Rationale: Educating the community about accidental poisoning is an important part of community health nursing. Prevention is the first line of defense against accidental poisoning. Having emergency phone numbers handy and identifying household poisons are good interventions, but not as important as basic information about prevention. Storing antidotes is not recommended for the public.




luvbio

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Reply 2 on: Jul 23, 2018
:D TYSM


bassamabas

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Reply 3 on: Yesterday
Excellent

 

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