The perinatal nurse is giving discharge instructions to a woman, status post suction and curettage secondary to a hydatidiform mole. The woman asks why she must take oral contraceptives for the next 12 months.
The best response from the nurse is a. If you get pregnant within 1 year, the chance of a successful pregnancy is very
small. Therefore, if you desire a future pregnancy, it would be better for you to use
the most reliable method of contraception available.
b. The major risk to you after a molar pregnancy is a type of cancer that can be
diagnosed only by measuring the same hormone that your body produces during
pregnancy. If you were to get pregnant, it would make the diagnosis of this cancer
more difficult.
c. If you can avoid a pregnancy for the next year, the chance of developing a second
molar pregnancy is rare. Therefore, to improve your chance of a successful
pregnancy, it is better not to get pregnant at this time.
d. Oral contraceptives are the only form of birth control that will prevent a
recurrence of a molar pregnancy.
Question 2
What is the best nursing response to the mother of a 4-year-old child who asks what she can do to help the child cope with a sibling's repeated hospitalizations?
a. Recommend that the child be sent to visit the grandmother until the sibling returns
home.
b. Inform the parent that the child is too young to visit the hospital.
c. Assume the child understands that the sibling will soon be discharged because the
child asks no questions.
d. Help the mother give the child a simple explanation of the treatment, and
encourage the mother to have the child visit the hospitalized sibling.