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Author Question: A nurse is interviewing a patient being admitted to the hospital for surgery. During the interview, ... (Read 29 times)

kwoodring

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A nurse is interviewing a patient being admitted to the hospital for surgery. During the interview, the nurse introduces self and explains that will be gathering some information. The nurse is in which phase of the interview?
 
  a. Orientation
  b. Working
  c. Assessment
  d. Termination

Question 2

A patient is hospitalized with a central nervous system infection that needs to be treated with water-soluble antibiotics. The medications will be instilled into the subarachnoid space via an epidural catheter.
 
  Why is this the best route of administration for this patient? a. Intravenous water-soluble antibiotics cannot pass through the blood-brain barrier.
  b. Only water-soluble medications can pass into the brain and cerebrospinal fluid.
  c. Older patients better tolerate lipid soluble medications than younger patients.
  d. Lipid soluble medications are safer for patients who are pregnant.



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anyusername12131

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Answer to Question 1

A
The orientation phase begins with introducing oneself and one's position and explaining the purpose of the interview. The nurse explains to patients why the data are being collected and assures the patient that the information will remain confidential and will be used only by health care professionals who provide his or her care. During the working phase you gather information about a patient's health status. When the interview comes to an end, this is called termination. Assessment is the first step in the nursing process, not the first step in an interview.

Answer to Question 2

A
To be distributed to an organ, a medication needs to pass through all the biological membranes of that organ. Some membranes serve as barriers to the passage of medications. For example, the blood-brain barrier allows only lipid-soluble medications to pass into the brain and cerebrospinal fluid. Therefore central nervous system (CNS) infections sometimes require treatment with antibiotics injected directly into the subarachnoid space in the spinal cord. Older patients often experience adverse effects (e.g., confusion) because they experience a change in the permeability of the blood-brain barrier, which enhances the passage of fat-soluble medications into the brain. Lipid-soluble, nonionized drugs easily cross the placenta and can cause serious harm to the fetus.




kwoodring

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Reply 2 on: Jul 22, 2018
Great answer, keep it coming :)


Missbam101

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Reply 3 on: Yesterday
Thanks for the timely response, appreciate it

 

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