Comprehensive Examination With Correct Answers
Section 1: Nursing Process & Critical Thinking
1. What is the systematic, rational method of planning and providing individualized nursing care
called?
Correct Answer: The nursing process
2. Which decision-making process is considered the least effective in clinical practice?
Correct Answer: Establishing assumptions
3. What core element does the trial-and-error method of problem-solving lack in clinical
settings?
Correct Answer: Exactness
4. When is the research process of problem-solving most effectively utilized?
Correct Answer: When used by experienced researchers or advanced practice nurses
5. Why is the nursing process method universally implemented in nursing care?
Correct Answer: It creates a dynamic, continuous interaction between the client and the
nurse
6. What essential capacity does critical thinking allow nurses to leverage during acute medical
emergencies?
Correct Answer: The ability to quickly recognize clinically significant changes and patterns
7. What cognitive or cognitive-intuitive state is described when a nurse has an unexplainable
feeling that something is going wrong with a patient?
Correct Answer: Intuition
8. A nurse observes a patient with a gunshot wound and immediately prepares for fluid volume
replacement because they assume the client is at high risk for what complication?
Correct Answer: Hypovolemic shock
9. How are basic nursing cognitive skills primarily learned and solidified by students?
Correct Answer: Through reading, critical thinking, and applying health-related literature to
practice
10. What is the fundamental priority when a nurse begins the planning stage of a client's care
plan?
Correct Answer: Establishing client-centered, measurable goals and prioritizing nursing
diagnoses
Section 2: Vital Signs & Health Assessment
11. How long should a nurse wait to measure an oral temperature if the client has just consumed
ice water?
Correct Answer: 15 to 30 minutes
, 12. To ensure safety and baseline predictability, under what clinical condition can vital signs
measurement be delegated to an Unlicensed Assistive Personnel (UAP)?
Correct Answer: When the patient is in a stable, predictable condition
13. If a patient's radial pulse is irregular, what action must the nurse take next to ensure
accuracy?
Correct Answer: Count the apical pulse for one full minute
14. What is the standard physical positioning of the patient's arm relative to the heart when
assessing manual blood pressure?
Correct Answer: At the level of the heart
15. What specific physiological change causes orthostatic hypotension when a patient stands up
too quickly?
Correct Answer: Peripheral vasodilation with a subsequent drop in venous return to the
heart
16. To prevent a false low reading, how high above the palpatory systolic pressure should a
blood pressure cuff be inflated?
Correct Answer: 30 mmHg above the palpatory reading
17. What site is preferred for checking a pulse during an adult cardiopulmonary resuscitation
(CPR) emergency?
Correct Answer: The carotid artery
18. If a patient is actively engaged in a phone call but requires routine, non-emergent vital signs,
what should the nurse do?
Correct Answer: Wait at the bedside or return shortly after the call finishes to accurately
assess the patient
19. Which piece of data provides the most rapid, quantitative evidence of an acute shift in a
client's fluid volume status?
Correct Answer: Daily weights measured at the same time every morning
20. Where should the nurse inspect to check for cyanosis in an individual with deeply pigmented
or dark skin?
Correct Answer: Mucous membranes, conjunctiva, and nail beds
Section 3: Medication Administration & Safety
21. How many distinct times must a nurse verify a medication label against the Medication
Administration Record (MAR) before administration?
Correct Answer: Three times
22. Who carries the ultimate legal and professional responsibility for their own actions when
administering any medication?
Correct Answer: The nurse administering the medication
23. What should a nurse immediately do if they are completely unfamiliar with a medication
prescribed to an assigned patient?
Correct Answer: Look up the medication in an approved drug formulary or contact the
institutional pharmacist