TEST BANK
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Rosenthal: Lehne's Pharmacotherapeutics for Advanced Practice Providers, 3rd Ed.
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Material
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1. Prescriptive Authority ss
2. Rational Drug Selection and Prescription Writing
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3. Promoting Positive Outcomes of Drug Therapy
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4. Pharmacokinetics, Pharmacodynamics, and Drug Interactions ss ss ss ss
5. Adverse Drug Reactions and Medication Errors
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6. Individual Variation in Drug Responses
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7. Genetic and Genomic Considerations in Pharmacotherapeutics
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8. Drug Therapy During Pregnancy and Breast-Feeding
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9. Drug Therapy in Pediatric Patients
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10. Drug Therapy in Geriatric Patients
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11. Basic Principles of Neuropharmacology
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12. Physiology of the Peripheral Nervous System ss ss ss ss ss
13. Muscarinic Agonists ss
14. Muscarinic Antagonists ss
15. Adrenergic Agonists ss
16. Adrenergic Antagonists ss
17. Indirect-Acting Antiadrenergic Agents ss ss
18. Introduction to Central Nervous System Pharmacology
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19. Drugs for Parkinson Disease
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20. Drugs for Alzheimer Disease
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21. Drugs for Seizure Disorders
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22. Drugs for Muscle Spasm and Spasticity
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23. Local Anesthetics
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24. Opioid Analgesics, Opioid Antagonists, and Nonopioid Centrally Acting Analgesics
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25. Drugs for Headache
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26. Antipsychotic Agents and Their Use in Schizophrenia ss ss ss ss ss ss
27. Antidepressants
28. Drugs for Bipolar Disorder
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29. Sedative-Hypnotic Drugs ss
30. Management of Anxiety Disorders ss ss ss
31. Central Nervous System Stimulants and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
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32. Substance Use Disorders I: Basic Considerations
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33. Substance Use Disorders II: Alcohol ss ss ss ss
34. Substance Use Disorders III: Nicotine and Smoking
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35. Substance Use Disorders IV: Major Drugs of Abuse Other Than Alcohol and Nicotine
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36. Review of Hemodynamics ss ss
37. Diuretics
38. Drugs Acting on the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System
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39. Calcium Channel Blockers ss ss
40. Vasodilators
41. Drugs for Hypertension
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42. Drugs for Heart Failure
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43. Antidysrhythmic Drugs ss
44. Prophylaxis Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: Drugs Cholesterol Triglyceride Levels
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45. Drugs for Angina Pectoris 46. Anticoagulant, Antiplatelet, and Thrombolytic Drugs
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47. Drugs for Deficiency Anemias
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48. Drugs for Diabetes Mellitus
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49. Drugs for Thyroid Disorders
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50. Estrogens and Progestins: Basic Pharmacology and Noncontraceptive Applications
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51. Birth Control
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53. Drugs for Erectile Dysfunction and Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia
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54. Review of the Immune System
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55. Childhood Immunization ss
56. Antihistamines
57. Cyclooxygenase Inhibitors: Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs and Acetaminophen
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58. Glucocorticoids in Nonendocrine Disorders ss ss ss
59. Drug Therapy of Rheumatoid Arthritis
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60. Drug Therapy of Gout
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61. Drugs Affecting Calcium Levels and Bone Mineralization
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62. Drugs for Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
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63. Drugs for Allergic Rhinitis, Cough, and Colds
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64. Drugs for Peptic Ulcer Disease
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65. Laxatives
66. Other Gastrointestinal Drugs
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67. Vitamins
68. Drugs for Weight Loss
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69. Complementary and Alternative Therapies ss ss ss
70. Basic Principles of Antimicrobial Therapy
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71. Drugs That Weaken the Bacterial Cell Wall I: Penicillins
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72. Drugs That Weaken the Bacterial Cell Wall II: Other Drugs
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73. Bacteriostatic Inhibitors of Protein Synthesis ss ss ss ss
74. Aminoglycosides: Bactericidal Inhibitors of Protein Synthesis ss ss ss ss ss
75. Sulfonamides and Trimethoprim ss ss
76. Drug Therapy of Urinary Tract Infections
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77. Drugs Therapy for Tuberculosis
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78. Miscellaneous Antibacterial Drugs ss ss
79. Antifungal Agents ss
80. Antiviral Agents I: Drugs for Non-HIV Viral Infections
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81. Antiviral Agents II: Drugs for HIV Infection and Related Opportunistic Infections
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82. Drug Therapy of Sexually Transmitted Diseases
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83. Anthelmintics, Antiprotozoal Drugs, and Ectoparasiticides
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84. Introduction to Immunomodulators ss ss
85. Supportive Care of Patients Receiving Anticancer Drugs
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86. Drugs for Cancer Pain
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87. Drugs for the Eye
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88. Drugs for the Skin
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89. Drugs for the Ear
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90. Agents Affecting the Volume and Ion Content of Body Fluids
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91. Management of ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction
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92. Additional Acute Care Drugs ss ss ss
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Material
Lehne's Pharmacotherapeutics for Advanced Practice Nurses and Physician Assistants
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3rd Edition TEST BANK
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by Laura D. Rosenthal
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Chapter 1: Prescriptive Authority Test Bank
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ssMultiple Choice ss
1. An APRN works in a urology clinic under the supervision of a physician who does not
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restrict the types of medications the APRN is allowed to prescribe. State law does not require
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the APRN to practice under physician supervision. How would the APRN‘s prescriptive
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authority be described?
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a. Full authority ss
b. Independent
c. Without limitation ss
d. Limited authority ss
ACTUAL ANSWERS: B ss ss
The APRN has independent prescriptive authority because the regulating body does not
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require that the APRN work under physician supervision. Full prescriptive authority gives
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the provider the right to prescribe independently and without limitation. Limited authority
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places restrictions on the types of drugs that can be prescribed .DIF: Cognitive Level:
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Comprehension REF: p.
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1TOP: Nursing Process: I MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiologic
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Integrity: Pharmacologic and Parenteral Therapies
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2. Which factors increase the need for APRNs to have full prescriptive authority?
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a. More patients will have access to health care.
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b. Enrollment in medical schools is predicted to decrease. ss ss ss ss ss ss ss
c. Physician‘s assistants are being utilized less often. ss ss ss ss ss ss
d. APRN education is more complex than education for physicians.
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ACTUAL ANSWERS: A ss ss
Implementation of the Affordable Care Act has increased the number of individuals with
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health care coverage, and thus the number who have access to health care services. The
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increase in the number of patients creates the need for more providers with prescriptive
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authority. APRNs can fill this practice gap. DIF: Cognitive Level: Comprehension REF: p.
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2TOP: Nursing Process:
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