ANCC TEST BANK ACTUAL EXAM PRACTICE LATEST VERSION
WITH COMPLETE 130 UPDATED QUESTIONS AND CORRECT
DETAILED ANSWERS \\VERIFIED ANSWERS 100% PASS GRADED A+
The gerontological nurse (a) explain to the woman that the discharge is normal.
practitioner performs a
speculum examination for a
71- year-old female patient
without symptoms, and
finds a thin, whitish,
nonodorous
mucoid discharge high in
the patient's vagina. The
nurse practitioner's most
appropriate
intervention is to:
(a) explain to the woman that
the discharge is normal.
(b) prescribe estrogen
cream, twice a week.
prescribe a topical
(c)
antifungal
medication, applied
vaginally each night for
one week.
(d) recommend the daily
use of a vaginal lubricant,
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for three days.
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Temporal arteritis requires (a) blindness in the affected eye.
immediate treatment in
order to prevent:
(a) blindness in the affected
eye.
(b) facial nerve palsy.
(c) transient ischemic attack.
(d) trigeminal neuralgia.
The test of choice for (b) serum ferritin level.
diagnosing iron deficiency
anemia is a:
(a) reticulocyte count.
(b) serum ferritin level.
(c) total iron binding capacity.
(d) transferrin saturation level.
Which profile characterizes (c) Single, White, and male
the older adult with the
highest risk for suicide?
(a) Divorced, Asian, and female
(b) Married, Amish, and female
(c) Single, White, and male
Widowed, African-American,
(d)
and male
The gerontological nurse (a) actinic keratosis.
practitioner notes a well-
demarcated, dry, rough, tan-
colored area that measures 1
cm on the forearm of a retired
man who worked as a park
ranger.
The man says that the lesion
has been
present for years. The lesion
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is suggestive of:
(a) actinic keratosis.
(b) keratoacanthoma.
(c) seborrheic keratosis.
(d) senile lentigo.
An 87-year-old patient, (a) might never completely disappear.
who has multiple, fluid-
filled and unilateral
lesions on an
erythematous base that
follows a
dermatome, reports severe
pain and
burning at the site. The
patient asks how long the
pain will last. The
gerontological nurse
practitioner responds that
the pain:
(a) might never completely
disappear.
(b) will disappear in four to six
weeks.
(c) will disappear in six months
to one year.
(d) will disappear once the
lesions are gone.
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