WITH DETAILED SOLUTIONS
◉ physical restraints. Answer: any manual method or physical or
mechanical device, material, or equipment attached to the client's
body that restrict the client's movement
◉ QSEN (Quality and Safety Education for Nurses). Answer: Patient-
Centered Care
Teamwork and Collaboration
Evidence-Based Practice
Quality Improvement
Safety
Informatics
◉ restraints. Answer: protective devices that limit or restrict
movement
◉ Safety strap body restraints. Answer: Restraints used to ensure
the safety of clients who are transported by wheelchair or gurney, or
to protect clients confined to a bed or a chair. AKA belt restraint.
,◉ Wrong-site surgery (WSS). Answer: A surgical operation that is
performed at the wrong location on a client's body due to error.
◉ 5 P's of neurovascular assessment. Answer: Pain
Pulse
Pallor
Paresthesia
Paralysis
◉ Ambulation. Answer: the act of walking
◉ appendicular skeleton. Answer: The portion of the skeleton that
attaches to the axial skeleton and has the limbs attached to it
◉ atrophy. Answer: the wasting away of a body organ or tissue
◉ axial skeleton. Answer: Portion of the skeletal system that consists
of the skull, rib cage, and vertebral column
◉ bradykinesia. Answer: extreme slowness in movement
, ◉ Cartilage. Answer: A connective tissue that is more flexible than
bone and that protects the ends of bones and keeps them from
rubbing together.
◉ crepitation. Answer: the grating sound heard when the ends of a
broken bone move together
◉ discs. Answer: cartilage tissue separate the vertebrae to cushion
the bones and allow movement
◉ epiphyseal plate. Answer: Growth plate, made of cartilage,
gradually ossifies
◉ kyphosis. Answer: excessive outward curvature of the spine,
causing hunching of the back.
◉ Ligaments. Answer: Connect bone to bone
◉ lordosis. Answer: abnormal increase in the forward curvature of
the lumbar spine
◉ Osteoblasts. Answer: bone forming cells
◉ osteoclasts. Answer: Bone-destroying cells