BSN 246 HESI Health Assessment V1 Exam
Actual Exam 2026/2027 | Complete Exam-
Style Questions | 100% Verified – Detailed
Rationales – Pass Guaranteed – A+ Graded
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Section 1 | Health History and Interviewing | Q1 – Q13
Section 2 | Physical Assessment Techniques | Q14 – Q25
Section 3 | Head-to-Toe Assessment | Q26 – Q37
Section 4 | Special Populations and Documentation | Q38 – Q50
Instructions: Choose the single best answer. Pass: 75% in 90 minutes.
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SECTION 1: HEALTH HISTORY AND INTERVIEWING Q1 – Q13
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Question 1 of 50
A 34-year-old client arrives at the clinic reporting persistent fatigue and difficulty sleeping for
the past three months. During the health history interview, the nurse notices the client provides
vague, one-word responses and avoids eye contact when asked about stress at home. Which
nursing action best supports gathering a complete and accurate health history?
A. Switch to a structured questionnaire to minimize the need for verbal responses
B. Ask the client to return when they are ready to discuss their concerns openly
C. Acknowledge the client's discomfort and ask a gentle, open-ended question about what has
been most difficult lately
D. Document that the client is uncooperative and proceed with the physical examination
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Acknowledging discomfort and using a gentle open-ended question creates
psychological safety and encourages the client to share sensitive information at their own pace.
Option A minimizes therapeutic communication by replacing dialogue with a form, which may
cause the client to feel dismissed. Building rapport through nonjudgmental presence is
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foundational to obtaining a reliable health history, especially when clients display guarded
behavior.
Question 2 of 50
A 67-year-old male is being admitted to the medical-surgical unit for elective knee replacement
surgery. During the medication reconciliation portion of the health history, the nurse discovers
the client takes over-the-counter ibuprofen 600 mg three times daily for arthritis pain, along with
prescribed lisinopril and metformin. What is the nurse's priority concern before surgery?
A. The metformin may need to be held the morning of surgery to prevent hypoglycemia
B. The ibuprofen increases bleeding risk and should be discussed with the surgical team
C. The lisinopril combination with ibuprofen always causes acute kidney injury
D. The client should stop all medications immediately to prepare for anesthesia
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen inhibit platelet aggregation
and significantly increase perioperative bleeding risk, making this the priority concern to
communicate to the surgeon and anesthesia provider. Option A is a valid consideration but does
not carry the same immediate safety implication as uncontrolled bleeding. Medication
reconciliation before surgery requires the nurse to identify over-the-counter agents that clients
may not recognize as clinically significant.
Question 3 of 50
During a home health visit, a nurse is interviewing a 72-year-old client who recently lost a
spouse and lives alone. The client states, "I don't see the point in taking my blood pressure pills
anymore. Nothing really matters now." Which response by the nurse demonstrates the most
therapeutic communication?
A. "Your doctor prescribed those pills for a reason, and stopping them could be dangerous."
B. "Are you thinking about hurting yourself or ending your life?"
C. "It sounds like you are feeling hopeless since your spouse passed away. Can you tell me more
about that?"
D. "Many people feel that way after a loss, but you will feel better with time."
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Reflecting the client's expressed hopelessness and inviting elaboration validates their
emotional experience while maintaining a therapeutic, nonjudgmental stance. Option A shifts to a
paternalistic tone that may shut down further disclosure. Assessing psychosocial factors during
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the health history interview allows the nurse to identify depression, grief, or suicidal ideation that
requires immediate intervention.
Question 4 of 50
A school nurse is conducting a health history on a 16-year-old athlete who was referred after
collapsing during basketball practice. The adolescent's parent is present in the room and answers
every question before the teen can respond. Which approach best ensures the nurse obtains
accurate and developmentally appropriate information?
A. Ask the parent to step out briefly so the nurse can interview the adolescent privately
B. Continue the interview with the parent speaking since they know the child's history best
C. Tell the parent to stop answering and let the teen speak for themselves
D. Skip the interview and proceed directly to the physical assessment
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Adolescents require privacy to disclose sensitive health information, and interviewing
them alone is a standard practice that supports autonomy and accurate data collection. Option B
undermines the adolescent's developmental need for independence and may result in incomplete
information about substance use, mental health, or sexual activity. School nurses must balance
family involvement with the legal and ethical obligation to provide confidential care to minors.
Question 5 of 50
A 45-year-old client presents to the emergency department with crushing chest pain radiating to
the left arm. During the focused health history, the client becomes diaphoretic and short of
breath. Which action should the nurse take first?
A. Complete the full health history while the client is still able to speak
B. Ask the client to rate the pain on a scale of zero to ten and document the response
C. Stop the interview and activate the emergency response system for immediate cardiac
evaluation
D. Obtain a detailed family history of cardiac disease before notifying the provider
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The client's presentation is consistent with acute coronary syndrome, which is a life-
threatening emergency requiring immediate intervention rather than continued data collection.
Option A prioritizes assessment over action and could delay critical treatment. Nurses must
recognize when a client's condition warrants stopping the interview and initiating emergency
protocols to prevent further deterioration.