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Mosby’s Pocket Guide to Fetal
Monitoring: A Multidisciplinary
Approach – Test Bank
9th Edition
Chapters
1. A Brief History of Fetal Monitoring
2. Physiologic Basis for Electronic Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring
3. Methods and Instrumentation
4. Uterine Activity Evaluation and Management
5. Pattern Recognition and Interpretation
6. Intrapartum Management of the Fetal Heart Rate Tracing
7. Influence of Gestational Age on Fetal Heart Rate
8. Fetal Assessment in Non-Obstetric Settings
9. Antepartum Fetal Assessment
10. Patient Safety, Risk Management, and Documentation
11. Obstetric Models and Electronic Fetal Monitoring in Europe
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Chapter 1: A Brief History of Fetal Monitoring
Question 1. What was the primary purpose of intermittent fetal heart auscultation
before electronic systems were introduced during labor?
A. To identify the fetal presentation early in pregnancy
B. To estimate fetal oxygenation indirectly by detecting heart rate changes
associated with stress
C. To measure uterine resting tone objectively
D. To determine exact umbilical cord blood pH at the bedside
✅ Correct Answer: B. To estimate fetal oxygenation indirectly by detecting heart
rate changes associated with stress
Rationale: Clinicians used auscultation to infer fetal tolerance of labor by
recognizing rate abnormalities that could reflect hypoxemia. Presentation is
assessed by examination, resting tone is not measured by auscultation, and cord pH
cannot be directly known from bedside listening.
DIF: Easy
TOP: Early surveillance concepts
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 2. A major factor that accelerated widespread hospital adoption of
electronic fetal monitoring was the belief that it would
A. replace the need for nursing assessment during labor
B. eliminate all operative births for nonreassuring status
C. improve continuous surveillance and reduce neurologic injury through earlier
recognition of compromise
D. make maternal repositioning unnecessary once a tracing was obtained
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✅ Correct Answer: C. improve continuous surveillance and reduce neurologic
injury through earlier recognition of compromise
Rationale: Continuous surveillance was attractive because it offered a permanent
record and the promise of earlier recognition of fetal compromise. It never replaced
bedside assessment, did not eliminate operative delivery, and did not remove the
need for intrauterine resuscitative measures.
DIF: Moderate
TOP: Evolution of continuous monitoring
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 3. The historical move from describing tracings as “fetal distress” toward
standardized pattern terminology was intended primarily to
A. increase alarm by using broader language
B. support clearer communication and reduce subjective interpretation
C. remove the need to correlate the tracing with the clinical picture
D. focus documentation only on legal rather than clinical issues
✅ Correct Answer: B. support clearer communication and reduce subjective
interpretation
Rationale: Standardized terms improve interprofessional communication and make
interpretations more reproducible. The change was not meant to heighten alarm,
ignore clinical context, or serve documentation alone.
DIF: Hard
TOP: Standardization of interpretation
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 4. An important contribution of early fetal monitoring pioneers was
demonstrating that fetal heart rate patterns should be interpreted alongside
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A. maternal age alone
B. uterine activity and clinical circumstances
C. the newborn Apgar score only
D. estimated fetal weight only
✅ Correct Answer: B. uterine activity and clinical circumstances
Rationale: From the beginning, patterns were understood in relation to contractions
and the labor context. Maternal age, newborn Apgar, or estimated fetal weight
alone cannot explain intrapartum patterns.
DIF: Easy
TOP: Foundational interpretation principles
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 5. Internal fetal scalp electrode use developed historically because
external techniques sometimes failed to provide
A. a tracing when maternal habitus or movement interfered with signal acquisition
B. documentation that could be stored in the chart
C. enough contractions to continue labor
D. maternal vital sign data during epidural placement
✅ Correct Answer: A. a tracing when maternal habitus or movement interfered
with signal acquisition
Rationale: Internal monitoring improved signal reliability when external
transducers were limited by motion, obesity, or poor contact. Charting, contraction
frequency, and maternal vital signs were not the driving reasons.
DIF: Moderate
TOP: Development of internal methods
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
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Question 6. One of the most important historical lessons from decades of fetal
monitoring is that tracings should never be used as
A. one component of clinical assessment
B. a substitute for thoughtful clinical judgment
C. a communication tool during handoff
D. a prompt for intrauterine resuscitation
✅ Correct Answer: B. a substitute for thoughtful clinical judgment
Rationale: History shows that EFM is useful only when interpreted within the
clinical picture. It should complement—not replace—judgment, communication,
and appropriate intervention.
DIF: Hard
TOP: Limits of technology
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 7. Why did debates about electronic fetal monitoring intensify despite its
rapid adoption?
A. Because the technology could not record a strip for more than 10 minutes
B. Because many abnormal-looking tracings were poorly predictive of actual
acidemia or injury
C. Because it was only usable in tertiary centers
D. Because it always underestimated contraction intensity
✅ Correct Answer: B. Because many abnormal-looking tracings were poorly
predictive of actual acidemia or injury
Rationale: A central controversy has been the high false-positive rate of concerning
patterns for serious neonatal outcomes. Recording duration, center type, and
universal underestimation of contraction intensity were not the core issues.
DIF: Easy
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TOP: Limitations and controversy
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 8. National efforts to standardize fetal heart rate definitions were
historically important because they
A. allowed each hospital to keep its own unique pattern names
B. made research and bedside communication more consistent
C. proved that all cesarean births for fetal indication were preventable
D. eliminated disagreements between nurses and physicians
✅ Correct Answer: B. made research and bedside communication more consistent
Rationale: Uniform definitions improve both research quality and clinical
communication. They do not guarantee perfect outcomes or eliminate professional
disagreement.
DIF: Moderate
TOP: Consensus development
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 9. Compared with intermittent auscultation, continuous EFM offered the
historical advantage of
A. real-time trend assessment across contractions and baseline periods
B. direct measurement of fetal blood oxygen saturation in every labor
C. absolute prevention of cord compression
D. elimination of documentation requirements
✅ Correct Answer: A. real-time trend assessment across contractions and baseline
periods
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Rationale: Continuous tracing allows trend recognition over time, particularly in
relation to contractions. It does not directly measure oxygen saturation, prevent
cord compression, or remove documentation duties.
DIF: Hard
TOP: Comparative development of methods
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 10. A lasting historical impact of EFM on obstetric practice is the
creation of
A. a permanent physiologic record of intrapartum events
B. a guaranteed method for diagnosing neonatal encephalopathy etiology
C. universal agreement on when to perform operative vaginal delivery
D. a substitute for informed consent discussions
✅ Correct Answer: A. a permanent physiologic record of intrapartum events
Rationale: One enduring consequence of EFM is the stored strip documenting
events during labor. It does not establish causation with certainty, settle all
management questions, or replace consent conversations.
DIF: Easy
TOP: Medicolegal and clinical record
MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiological Integrity
Question 11. Historically, fetal monitoring became a multidisciplinary subject
because safe interpretation depends on coordination among
A. obstetric, nursing, and neonatal team members
B. billing, radiology, and dietary departments
C. orthopedic and ophthalmology consultants
D. only the individual who places the transducer