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Nursing328 CJE study guide Chamberlain College 2026

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Nursing328 CJE study guide Chamberlain College 2026/Nursing328 CJE study guide Chamberlain College 2026

Institution
Nursing328
Course
Nursing328

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Perfect — I’ll give you a pediatric-only, NCLEX-style study guide
covering every topic you listed.
I’ll keep each section high-yield: what to assess, key s/s, nursing care,
procedural steps (when applicable), priority actions, do’s / don’ts, and
NCLEX tips — exactly the format that helps you answer exam questions
quickly.

This is long — but organized so you can jump to a topic. Save/print for
study.



PEDIATRIC NURSING — HIGH-YIELD STUDY GUIDE (NCLEX STYLE)

Quick reminder on priorities for pediatrics:

1. Airway/Breathing (look for increased work of breathing)

2. Circulation / Massive hemorrhage

3. LOC/Neuro changes (ICP, seizures)

4. Fever in neutropenic or infant < 2 months
For answer choices: pick the option that fixes the most life-
threatening problem first.



RESPIRATORY

Croup (laryngotracheobronchitis)

 Key s/s: Barking cough, inspiratory stridor, hoarseness, low-grade
fever, worse at night.

 Assessment: Audible stridor at rest = moderate/severe. Monitor RR,
work of breathing (retractions), pulse ox.

 Nursing care / interventions:

o Keep child calm (crying worsens airway).

o Humidified air / cool mist (can reduce edema).

o Racemic epinephrine for moderate-severe stridor (per order)
— observe for rebound.

o Dexamethasone single dose PO/IM/IV to reduce inflammation.

,  Priority: If stridor at rest or increased work → prepare for airway
support; call provider/rapid response.

 Do NOT: force tests that upset the child. Avoid sedatives that depress
respirations.

 NCLEX tip: Calm environment + steroids + racemic epi for severe
cases.



Epiglottitis

 Key s/s: Rapid onset, high fever, severe sore throat, drooling, muffled
voice, tripod position, severe inspiratory stridor, anxiety.

 Assessment: DO NOT attempt to visualize throat with tongue
depressor (can cause airway closure).

 Nursing care:

o Keep child calm and upright.

o Prepare for immediate intubation — airway can close
quickly.

o Droplet precautions until bacterial cause addressed.

 Priority: Airway management → call anesthesia/ENT/rapid response.

 Do NOT: inspect throat or make child cry.

 NCLEX tip: Tripod + drooling + high fever = epiglottitis → airway
first.



RSV (Bronchiolitis)

 Key s/s: Rhinorrhea, cough, wheeze, tachypnea, poor feeding, apnea
in infants.

 Assessment: Monitor O₂ sat, hydration, respiratory effort.

 Nursing care:

o Supportive: humidified O₂ if hypoxic, suction (nasal) before
feeding, hydrate, small frequent feeds.

o Monitor for apnea in neonates.

, o Contact/droplet precautions depending on facility.

 Medications: Palivizumab prophylaxis for high-risk infants (preterm,
chronic lung disease, congenital heart disease) — admin prior to RSV
season.

 Do NOT: give bronchodilators routinely (some improvement possible
but not standard).

 NCLEX tip: Suctioning before feeds & maintaining hydration are
exam favorites.



Asthma (Pediatric)

 Key s/s: Wheeze, cough (especially night/exercise), SOB, chest
tightness, prolonged expiratory phase.

 Assessment: Peak expiratory flow (age-appropriate), pulse ox, work
of breathing.

 Nursing care:

o Nebulized short-acting β2 agonists (albuterol) for acute
exacerbation.

o Systemic steroids for moderate/severe exacerbation.

o Maintenance: inhaled corticosteroids, spacer use for children,
allergy control.

 Priority: If severe — oxygen, continuous nebulizer, prepare for
intubation.

 Do NOT: withhold rescue inhaler. Teach spacer + mask for toddlers.

 NCLEX tip: Spacer increases med deposition; give rescue meds first.



Cystic Fibrosis (CF) (covered twice in list — core points)

 Key s/s: Chronic productive cough, recurrent respiratory infections,
failure to thrive, bulky/foul stools, salty skin.

 Assessment: Pulmonary status, growth parameters, stool patterns,
glucose (CFRD), sputum cultures.

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Institution
Nursing328
Course
Nursing328

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