Author Question: A nurse is caring for clients in a busy emergency department. Which actions should the nurse take to ... (Read 145 times)

TFauchery

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A nurse is caring for clients in a busy emergency department. Which actions should the nurse take to ensure client and staff safety? (Select all that apply.)
 
  a. Leave the stretcher in the lowest position with rails down so that the client can access the bathroom.
  b. Use two identifiers before each intervention and before mediation administration.
  c. Attempt de-escalation strategies for clients who demonstrate aggressive behaviors.
  d. Search the belongings of clients with altered mental status to gain essential medical information.
  e. Isolate clients who have immune suppression disorders to prevent hospital-acquired infections.

Question 2

A nurse is triaging clients in the emergency department. Which client should the nurse classify as nonurgent?
 
  a. A 44-year-old with chest pain and diaphoresis
  b. A 50-year-old with chest trauma and absent breath sounds
  c. A 62-year-old with a simple fracture of the left arm
  d. A 79-year-old with a temperature of 104  F



bfulkerson77

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Answer to Question 1

ANS: B, C, D
To ensure client and staff safety, nurses should use two identifiers per The Joint Commission's National Patient Safety Goals; follow the hospital's security plan, including de-escalation strategies for people who demonstrate aggressive or violent tendencies; and search belongings to identify essential medical information. Nurses should also use standard fall prevention interventions, including leaving stretchers in the lowest position with rails up, and isolating clients who present with signs and symptoms of contagious infectious disorders.

Answer to Question 2

ANS: C
A client in a nonurgent category can tolerate waiting several hours for health care services without a significant risk of clinical deterioration. The client with a simple arm fracture and palpable radial pulses is currently stable, is not at significant risk of clinical deterioration, and would be considered nonurgent. The client with chest pain and diaphoresis and the client with chest trauma are emergent owing to the potential for clinical deterioration and would be seen immediately. The client with a high fever may be stable now but also has a risk of deterioration.



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