Answer to Question 1
Correct Answer:
Rationale 1: Women new to the U.S. will have little or no experience with the U.S. health care system. Culture heavily influences a patient's behaviors and attitudes during pregnancy, labor, and birth, so determining what the patient wants during her labor and birth will facilitate both a better experience for the family and a calmer situation for the health care team.
Rationale 2: Although tuberculosis is pandemic in refugee camps, and testing for tuberculosis in new arrivals to the U.S. is important, this question is about prenatal care. Testing for tuberculosis is not related to prenatal care.
Rationale 3: The patient is probably unfamiliar with paper dressing gowns and will need some instruction (often through demonstration). But this is not the highest priority. It is more important to find out what the patient expects to happen during her labor and birth.
Rationale 4: Providing written handouts in the patient's primary language is important. But a higher priority for prenatal care would be to assess what the patient's expectations for labor and birth are.
Answer to Question 2
Correct Answer: 4
Rationale 1: What kind of work the husband does is not an indicator of his adaptation.
Rationale 2: What furniture has been obtained is not an indicator of his adaptation.
Rationale 3: The husband's perception of his wife's moodiness is not an indicator of his adaptation.
Rationale 4: The adaptation of a husband to pregnancy includes his feelings about impending fatherhood.