Answer to Question 1
Correct Answer: 2
Rationale 1: Epilepsy could be caused by exposure to substances prenatally. The nurse does not know that is not the case in this situation.
Rationale 2: The reason the child has epilepsy is not as important as obtaining appropriate care for the child today.
Rationale 3: While it is true that women should realize that actions taken in pregnancy can affect the child, this is not the therapeutic response to this mother.
Rationale 4: Medical testing cannot tell when the damage occurred, and this statement reinforces the blame-placing and guilt expressed by the mother's statements.
Global Rationale: The reason the child has epilepsy is not as important as obtaining appropriate care for the child today. Epilepsy could be caused by exposure to substances prenatally. The nurse does not know that is not the case in this situation. While it is true that women should realize that actions taken in pregnancy can affect the child, this is not the therapeutic response to this mother. Medical testing cannot tell when the damage occurred, and this statement reinforces the blame-placing and guilt expressed by the mother's statements.
Answer to Question 2
Correct Answer: 3
Rationale 1: Most children with absence seizures (seizures without convulsions) will outgrow the disorder and not progress to tonicclonic seizure activity.
Rationale 2: All epileptics have seizures, but not all seizures manifest as convulsions.
Rationale 3: Some epileptic conditions manifest seizure activity that does not include the tonicclonic convulsion. An example of this type of seizure is the absence seizure, which is most often seen in children.
Rationale 4: Young boys may have absence seizures that are silent or do not manifest in convulsions, but they may also have classic tonicclonic seizure activity.
Global Rationale: Some epileptic conditions manifest seizure activity that does not include the tonicclonic convulsion. An example of this type of seizure is the absence seizure, which is most often seen in children. Most children with absence seizures (seizures without convulsions) will outgrow the disorder and not progress to tonicclonic seizure activity. All epileptics have seizures, but not all seizures manifest as convulsions. Young boys may have absence seizures that are silent or do not manifest in convulsions, but they may also have classic tonicclonic seizure activity.