After inspecting an adolescent male's genitalia, the nurse documents the findings as Tanner stage 3. Which of the following would be most likely?

A) Scrotum and testes slightly enlarged; sparse, long, downy pubic hair
B) Penis enlongated; pubic hair sparse over pubis, coarse and curly
C) Penis increased in width; abundant pubic hair not extending to thighs
D) Penis of adult size; dark curly abundant pubic hair to thighs


B

Nursing

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In teaching a patient how to determine total body fat at home, the nurse includes instructions to obtain measurements of:

a. Height and weight. b. Frame size and weight. c. Waist and hip circumferences. d. Mid-upper arm circumference and arm span.

Nursing

The population health nurse is caring for a client newly diagnosed with schizophrenia. The client asks if his son is at risk for the same health problem. On what should the nurse base a response to this client?

1. The client's son does not have a greater risk of developing schizophrenia. 2. Schizophrenia skips a generation so the client's son will not have a greater risk of developing schizophrenia. 3. The son has a 10% to 15% greater risk for developing schizophrenia. 4. Only the client's daughters have a greater risk for developing schizophrenia.

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A pregnant woman is asked to observe fetal movements as a fetal-assessment technique. You would instruct her to

A) report if she feels no movement for any half-hour period. B) count only movements that are strong enough to hurt. C) count fetal movements for 1 hour at the same time each day. D) choose a different time frame each day to count movements.

Nursing

When providing education for a patient newly diagnosed with mild Alzheimer's disease (AD) and the family, the nurse identifies which actions as signs that the disease is progressing in severity? Note: Credit will be given only if all correct

choices and no incorrect choices are selected. Select all that apply. 1. The patient repeatedly allows pots of water to boil dry. 2. The patient claims that the newspaper is not readable anymore. 3. The patient becomes agitated when old friends come to visit. 4. The patient is obsessive about how personal belongings are organized. 5. The patient develops a ravenous appetite, especially for carbohydrates.

Nursing