Change for the community as client must often occur at several levels because:
a. Health problems caused by lifestyle are multidimensional.
b. Most individuals can change their habits alone.
c. Aggregates are responsible for social change.
d. Geographic areas often have health risks that the nurse must identify.
A
Because health problems caused by lifestyle cannot be solved simply by asking individuals to choose healthy habits, change for the community client must often take place at several levels.
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The nurse is developing a plan of care for a patient with gastritis and an inflammation of the intestines. The patient is complaining of severe abdominal discomfort and nausea
The patient also reports having restless leg syndrome and an inability to urinate. As a problem statement of the nursing diagnosis, the nurse should write: a. Gastritis related to inflammation. b. Alterations in comfort and ability to void. c. Abdominal pain and nausea related to inflammation. d. Alteration in comfort related to restless leg syndrome and inflammation.
The parents of a 7-month-old infant, being seen at the clinic for the administration of a hepatitis B vaccine, ask if their baby can also be given a vaccine to prevent the chickenpox during this visit
Which response by the nurse is the most appropriate? 1. "It will be less stressful to administer both shots during this visit." 2. "The additional injection will make your child run a fever." 3. "You really should wait and come back next month for this immunization." 4. "This immunization is not offered until after the age of 12 months."
Order the stages of normal grief, according to John Bowlby
1. ________ Reorganization 2. ________ Disequilibrium 3. ________ Disorganization and despair 4. ________ Numbness/protest
What is the most effective action by the nurse when delivering spiritual care to a patient of the same religion as the nurse?
1) Understanding that the patient shares the same beliefs 2) Striving to meet the patient's spiritual needs independently 3) Explaining her own religious beliefs to the patient 4) Developing a greater awareness of her own spirituality