Exam 6: Informed Consent: Rights and Obligations
Exam 1: An Introduction to the Ethics and the Law: a Perspective for Nurses10 Questions
Exam 2: Ethical Theories: Their Meaning for Nursing21 Questions
Exam 3: Guiding Ethical Decision Making: Resources for Nurses17 Questions
Exam 4: The Canadian Legal System17 Questions
Exam 5: Regulation of the Nursing Profession17 Questions
Exam 6: Informed Consent: Rights and Obligations15 Questions
Exam 7: The Nurses Legal Accountabilities: Professional Competence, Misconduct, Malpractice, and Nursing Documentation15 Questions
Exam 8: Complexity at the End of Life: the Ethical and Legal Challenges15 Questions
Exam 9: Ethical and Legal Issues Related to Advancing Science and Technology15 Questions
Exam 10: Safeguarding Patient Rights15 Questions
Exam 11: Perspectives on the Rights of Nurses15 Questions
Exam 12: Ethical Issues in Leadership, the Organization, and Approaches to the Delivery of Care15 Questions
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Who is first considered to be a substitute decision maker if a married client cannot make decisions?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
A
Which of the following type of law regulates consent to treatment?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
The nurse administering an enema is concerned because the patient appears to be trying to stop the procedure. The nurse does not stop because the fluid is only partially administered, and the nurse continues with the task until it is completed. Is this nurse liable for battery?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
C
Which of the following terms best describes a nurse who touches a client without the client's consent?
(Multiple Choice)
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In provinces where children have the right to make decisions about their own health care, at which of the following ages or stages must a child be to give consent to treatment?
(Multiple Choice)
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It is ethically appropriate for a nurse to withhold explaining all the risks of a procedure to a client to decrease the client's anxiety.
(True/False)
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Consent must be expressed either verbally or in writing and be based on relevant information.
(True/False)
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The nurse tells a patient, through speech and miming, that she will be giving an enema to the patient. The patient implies consent by nodding her head. The patient suffers rectal trauma and bleeding during the procedure. Is the nurse liable, and why?
(Multiple Choice)
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A nurse is working in a busy emergency room (ER), and an unconscious patient needs timely interventions to avoid rapid deterioration. Should treatment be withheld until consent can be obtained from a substitute decision maker?
(Multiple Choice)
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A patient in the nurse's care is having surgery today and has signed only a general consent form. What other information must be documented?
(Multiple Choice)
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It is the nurse's responsibility to determine if anyone else may be present to help the patient interpret or clarify the information being given.
(True/False)
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The team caring for an incapable person must always respect the decisions of a legally appointed substitute decision maker.
(True/False)
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An older adult patient's initial and seemingly irrational refusal to give consent indicates mental incompetence.
(True/False)
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Which of the following ethical principles is the hallmark of informed consent?
(Multiple Choice)
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