Exam 4: Application of Ethics in Nursing Practice Settings
Exam 1: Legal Concepts and the Judicial Process15 Questions
Exam 2: Anatomy of a Lawsuit15 Questions
Exam 3: Introduction to Ethics15 Questions
Exam 4: Application of Ethics in Nursing Practice Settings15 Questions
Exam 5: Standards of Care15 Questions
Exam 6: Tort Law15 Questions
Exam 7: Nursing Liability: Defenses14 Questions
Exam 8: Informed Consent and Patient Self-Determination15 Questions
Exam 9: Documentation and Confidentiality15 Questions
Exam 10: Professional Liability Insurance15 Questions
Exam 11: Nurse Practice Acts, Licensure, and the Scope of Practice15 Questions
Exam 12: Advanced Nursing Practice Roles15 Questions
Exam 13: Corporate Liability Issues and Employment Laws15 Questions
Exam 14: Federal Laws: the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 and the Civil Rights Act of 199115 Questions
Exam 15: Nursing Management and the Nurse-Managers15 Questions
Exam 16: Delegation and Supervision15 Questions
Exam 17: Nursing in Acute Care Settings15 Questions
Exam 18: Nursing in Ambulatory and Managed Care Settings15 Questions
Exam 19: Public and Community Health Care15 Questions
Exam 20: Nursing in Long-Term Care Settings15 Questions
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The nurse intends to lobby the state legislature to write a new code of ethics for the nurses in the state. Is this an appropriate idea?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
C
The nurse believes that a physician's order written at the end of a shift is contrary to the accepted standard of care and could potentially harm the patient. What should the nurse do?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
B
The nurse uses the MORAL model for ethical decision making at the bedside. Which option reflects the first step (M) of this model?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
A
The hospital administration asks nursing services to assume housekeeping duties from midnight until 6:00 a.m. Nurses are fearful that this is the first step to shifting complete 24-hour-per-day responsibility for housekeeping duties to nursing services. The nurses believe this would take away from their ability to provide quality nursing care to their patients. This scenario is an example of which ethical concept?
(Multiple Choice)
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Nurses are revising the policy and procedure manual for the nursing unit. They work to ensure that the policies address more than one person and more than one set of circumstances. Which aspect of policy does this reflect?
(Multiple Choice)
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Unrest on the nursing unit has progressed to moral outrage among the nursing staff. Which statements made by the nurse manager to the chief nursing officer indicates an understanding of this issue?
(Multiple Choice)
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The nurse is providing care for a patient who was just diagnosed with diabetes mellitus. Which statements reflect this nurse's use of the values-based decision model in this situation?
(Multiple Choice)
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The nurse manager has identified high levels of moral distress on the nursing unit. Which change would be helpful in assisting nurses to cope?
(Multiple Choice)
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The patient who has been diagnosed with metastatic cancer declines chemotherapy treatments. The nurse assists this patient in explaining this position to other health care providers. What advocacy model is this nurse exemplifying?
(Multiple Choice)
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In which ways can the nurse best act as a patient advocate?
(Multiple Choice)
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The nurse manager of an oncology unit is interviewing nurses for a position. Which statements, made by nurse applicants, would the manager evaluate as indicating ability to respond appropriately to the ethical dilemmas?
(Multiple Choice)
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Nurses believe that there is a need to change policy for their clinical unit. What is the first step these nurses should take when considering this need for new policy?
(Multiple Choice)
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In nursing school, the student learns that the nurse should always consider the possible outcomes of any nursing action taken. What ethical concept does this consideration support?
(Multiple Choice)
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A nurse manager has started a dialogue regarding the American Nurses Association (ANA) Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements among staff nurses. Which staff nurse statements would the manager evaluate as indicating poor understanding of this document?
(Multiple Choice)
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The nurse manager is conducting a performance review with a nurse who has worked on the unit for 10 years. During the review, the nurse begins to cry and tells the manager, "I just can't do this anymore. I can't sleep because I have such bad nightmares about patients. I can't eat and I've already lost 15 pounds." The nurse manager identifies these findings as being possible signs of which problem?
(Multiple Choice)
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