Edition Thompson Test Bank
, Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Understanding Health Assessment
Chapter 2: Interviewing the Service user for the Health
History Chapter 3: Taking the Health History
Chapter 4: Assessing Nutrition and Anthropometric Measurements
Chapter 5: Assessment Techniques
Chapter 6: General Survey and Assessing Vital Signs
Chapter 7: Assessing Pain
Chapter 8: Assessing the Skin, Hair, and Nails
Chapter 9: Assessing the Head, Face, Mouth, and Neck
Chapter 10: Assessing the Ears
Chapter 11: Assessing the Eyes
Chapter 12: Assessing the Respiratory System
Chapter 13: Assessing the Cardiovascular System
Chapter 14: Assessing the Abdomen
Chapter 15: Assessing the Peripheral Vascular System and Regional Lymphatic System
Chapter 16: Assessing the Musculoskeletal System
Chapter 17: Assessing the Neurological System
Chapter 18: Assessing the Female Breasts, Axillae, and Reproductive System
Chapter 19: Assessing the Male Breasts and Reproductive System
Chapter 20: Assessing the Anus and Rectum
Chapter 21: Assessing the Newborn
Chapter 22: Assessing the Child and Adolescent
Chapter 23 Assessing the Pregnant Woman
Chapter 24: Assessing the Older Adult
,Chapter 1: Understanding Health Assessment
1. The World Health Organization (WHO) established a global strategy called “Health for All.”
The goal for this strategy is:
1. All individuals to get the same health care throughout their life spans.
2. The government to supply money to care for all the people in the world.
3. Resources for health care to be evenly distributed and accessible.
4. Health-care providers can never deny service users health care.
2. Health assessment is a foundational and priority nursing skill. This essential skill requires
registered registered nurses (RNs) to:
1. Diagnose and treat service users.
2. Identify normal and abnormal findings.
3. Refer service users with abnormal findings.
4. Counsel service users with psychosocial needs.
3. You are assessing a service user with five gunshot wounds on a trauma unit. There is a
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police presence outside his door because the service user is a known drug dealer in the
community. You know that registered nurses must treat all service users as persons. This
is called:
1. Caring.
2. Holistic process.
3. Person-centered care (PCC).
4. Standards of care.
4. The science-based framework updated every 10 years by the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services that has set national goals and objectives for health promotion and disease
prevention is:
1. Healthy People.
2. Healthy People 2020.
3. U.S. Preventive Task Force.
4. World Health Organization.
5. A 38-year-old male has a family history of colon cancer. His father died of colon cancer at age
48. The doctor recommended that this service user have a colonoscopy this year. This is an
example of:
1. Primary health prevention.
, 2. Secondary health prevention.
3. Tertiary health prevention.
6. A service user in the hospital puts on his call light and tells the person answering that he
“thinks he is running a fever and has stomach discomfort.” You are the registered registered
nurse in charge. What should you do?
1. Ask the medical assistant to go to the service user’s room and assess his complaints.
2. Go check to see if the service user has an order for Tylenol for a fever.
3. Page the resident on call immediately to assess the service user.
4. Go to the service user’s room and assess for fever and the epigastric discomfort.
7. You are leading an interdisciplinary team conference to discuss how to provide better care for
a challenging service user who has behavioral problems. There are several areas that need to be
problem solved and new ideas formulated to create an improved plan of care. What cognitive
skills are you using?
1. Critical thinking
2. Clinical decision making
3. Intuitive thinking
4. Clinical reasoning
8. Best practice assessment techniques and instruments have been validated by:
1. American Registered nurses Association.
2. Code of Ethics for Registered nurses With Interpretive Statements.
3. Research and evidence-based practice.
4. Service user Protection and Affordable Care Act.
9. Health and illness are determined by many factors. What are the determinants of health
identified by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)? Select all that apply.
1. Genetics and biology
2. Gender and occupation
3. Individual behavior
4. Social environment
5. Physical environment
6. Health services