A4 MAXE SDNUF
★ ★
N Department of Health Sciences
SCIENTIA · CURA · COMPASSIO
EST. 1908
Fundamentals of Nursing — Examination 4
N U R S I N G P R O C E SS — A SS E SS M E N T: D ATA CO L L E C T I O N , VA L I D AT I O N & C R I T I C A L T H I N K I N G
INSTITUTION College of Nursing COURSE CODE NURS 1101
PROGRAM Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) ACADEMIC YEAR
EXAM TITLE Fundamentals Exam 4 — Nursing Process TOTAL QUESTIONS 33 Questions
A
COURSE TITLE Nursing Fundamentals FORMAT Multiple Choice & Select All That Apply
EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ This exam covers the assessment phase of the nursing process including types of assessment, data collection, validation,
interviewing techniques, and critical thinking.
▸ Select the single best answer unless "Select all that apply" is indicated.
▸ Correct answers and clinical rationales appear below each question for NCLEX preparation.
SECTION I — ASSESSMENT: DATA COLLECTION, TYPES & MODELS Questions 1 – 33
1. Which of the following guidelines should a nursing instructor provide to nursing students who are now
responsible for assessing their clients?
A. "Assessment data about the client should be collected continuously."
B. "Assess your client after receiving the nursing report and again before giving a report to the next shift of nurses."
C. "Assess your client at least hourly if the client's vital signs are unstable, and every two hours if the vital signs are
stable."
D. "Assessment data should be collected prior to the physician rounding on the unit."
CORRECT ANSWER A — "Assessment data about the client should be collected continuously."
RATIONALE Assessment is an ongoing, continuous process that begins with the first client contact and continues
throughout the nursing relationship. Data collection is not limited to specific times — it occurs with every
interaction and observation.
, 2. The nurse is using a systematic approach to the collection of assessment data. The nurse uses an assessment
guide that uses a hierarchy of five life requirements universal to all persons. What model for organizing the
assessment data is the nurse using?
A. Human Needs (Maslow) model
B. Functional Health Patterns model
C. Human Response Patterns model
D. Body System model
CORRECT ANSWER A — Human Needs (Maslow) model
RATIONALE Maslow's hierarchy of human needs organizes assessment data according to five levels: physiological,
safety/security, love/belonging, self-esteem, and self-actualization. This model is universal to all persons
and prioritizes basic physiological needs first.
3. A novice nurse collects data on a newly admitted client. Upon evaluation of this data, the nurse provides an
erroneous interpretation. What is a corrective action for this interpretation?
A. Encourage the novice nurse to independently observe the same situation with a peer, validate the data, and
discuss the situation afterward.
B. Encourage the novice nurse to develop his or her own tool for data collection.
C. Encourage the novice nurse to collect and interpret the data for the client repeatedly, until the novice nurse arrives
at the correct interpretation.
D. Encourage the novice nurse to meet with the nurse manager to discuss the situation and seek mentoring for
communication skills.
CORRECT ANSWER A — Encourage the novice nurse to independently observe the same situation with a peer, validate
the data, and discuss the situation afterward.
RATIONALE Peer validation and collaborative discussion help novice nurses develop clinical judgment. Having a second
observer validate findings and then discussing interpretations promotes learning and prevents errors.
Developing a personal tool (B) or repeated collection without guidance (C) does not address the
interpretation deficit.
4. When documenting subjective data, the nurse should do which of the following?
A. Use the client's own words placed in quotation marks.
B. Paraphrase the information stated by the client.
C. Validate the information with the client's family prior to documentation.
D. Record the information using nonspecific words.
CORRECT ANSWER A — Use the client's own words placed in quotation marks.
RATIONALE Subjective data represents the client's personal experience and perceptions. Documenting the client's exact
words in quotation marks preserves accuracy and prevents misinterpretation. Paraphrasing can introduce
bias. The client is the primary source — family validation is not required for subjective data.