ASSESSMENT) 100 NCLEX-STYLE QUESTIONS,
ANSWERS, AND DETAILED RATIONALES Q&A
ALREADY GRADED A+
Section 1: Foundations of Health Assessment & Nursing Process
1. A nurse is conducting a health interview with a patient. Which statement by
the nurse demonstrates the use of "focusing" as a therapeutic communication
technique?
a) "Tell me more about your family history."
b) "Can you tell me exactly what you feel when you are having difficulty catching
your breath?"
c) "So, you're saying the pain started about three days ago?"
d) "We've covered a lot today. Let me summarize what we've discussed."
Answer: b
Rationale: Focusing is a communication technique used to narrow the topic to a
specific area of concern. It helps the patient elaborate on a particular symptom or
issue. Option B directs the patient to focus on a specific symptom (difficulty
breathing). Summarizing (D) reviews what was discussed; paraphrasing (C)
restates the patient's words; and asking about family history (A) is broad.
2. After completing a health interview, the nurse begins to measure the patient's
vital signs. The nurse is collecting:
a) Subjective data
b) Objective data
c) Secondary data
d) Constant data
,Answer: b
Rationale: Objective data is information that is measured by the nurse during the
physical examination, including vital signs, inspection, palpation, percussion, and
auscultation. Subjective data is information obtained from the patient during the
interview (what the patient says). Secondary data comes from sources other than
the patient (family, medical records). Constant data does not change (age, race).
3. A nurse is documenting findings from a health assessment. Which of the
following demonstrates documentation of subjective information?
a) "It hurts when I put weight on my leg."
b) "Abdomen soft and nontender to palpation."
c) "Blood pressure 110/68."
d) "Pulses present in lower extremities."
Answer: a
Rationale: Subjective data is documented using the patient's own words, often in
quotation marks. The patient statement "It hurts when I put weight on my leg" is
subjective data. Abdomen findings, blood pressure, and pulse assessments are
objective data (observable and measurable).
4. The nurse begins to document approximately three hours after completing a
health assessment. Which of the following might be true about this
documentation?
a) It will be highly accurate because the nurse had more time to interact with the
patient.
b) It may not be as detailed due to the time that has elapsed since the
assessment.
c) It will be focused and concise.
d) It will be thorough and complete.
Answer: b
Rationale: Documentation should be completed as soon as possible after the
,assessment. With a delay of three hours, information may be less accurate and
detailed due to memory lapses. Timely documentation ensures accuracy and
completeness.
5. The nurse documents assessment findings on a flow sheet using check marks
and short notations. This type of documentation is known as:
a) Narrative charting
b) SOAP charting
c) APIE charting
d) Charting by exception
Answer: d
Rationale: Charting by exception is a documentation system where only
exceptions from pre-established norms or significant findings are documented.
Flow sheets with check marks and short notations are used to document routine
findings. Narrative charting uses sentences and paragraphs; SOAP stands for
Subjective, Objective, Assessment, Plan; APIE stands for Assessment, Problem,
Intervention, Evaluation.
6. The nurse is reviewing information collected during the health interview and
begins to cluster or group data together. The nurse is demonstrating which
phase of the nursing process?
a) Assessment
b) Diagnosis
c) Planning
d) Evaluation
Answer: b
Rationale: After data is collected, the nurse uses critical thinking to cluster
(group) related data to create a nursing diagnosis. Assessment is the first step
(collecting data). Planning involves setting priorities and
goals. Evaluation compares the patient's status to stated goals.
, 7. The nurse is implementing the critical thinking process with information
collected during health assessment and is choosing approaches to implement. In
which step is this nurse engaged?
a) Analysis of the situation
b) Collection of information
c) Selecting alternatives
d) Evaluation
Answer: c
Rationale: Once the data is analyzed and alternatives are generated, the nurse
selects the most appropriate alternatives for the patient's care
needs. Analysis includes distinguishing normal from abnormal
data. Evaluation determines whether expected outcomes have been achieved.
8. During the health interview, a patient mentions being "very stressed about
her home situation." The nurse considers this information as impacting the
patient's level of pain control. Which approach is the nurse using?
a) Cultural approach
b) Holistic approach
c) Developmental approach
d) Communication approach
Answer: b
Rationale: The nurse is using a holistic approach by considering factors beyond
the patient's physiologic health status. Holism includes physical, emotional, social,
and spiritual factors that impact well-being. The patient's home stress is an
emotional/environmental factor affecting health.
9. During a health interview, a patient states that she becomes increasingly short
of breath when sitting in city traffic. The nurse views this information as:
a) A cultural factor