Claywell LPN To RN Transitions 3rd Edition
Claywell LPN To RN Transitions 3rd Edition
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Chapter 15: Teaching Patients and Their Families
Complete Chapter Questions With Answers
Sample Questions Are Posted Below
MULTIPLE CHOICE
| a. | specific to the assessed needs, interdisciplinary, and evaluated for effectiveness. |
| b. | specific to the assessed needs, cost-effective, and focused. |
| c. | based on the patient’s ability to learn, cost-effective, and timely. |
| d. | specific to assessed needs, timely, and delivered by only one person for continuity. |
ANS: A
TJC standards state, “The patient receives education and training specific to the patient’s assessed needs, abilities, learning preferences, and readiness to learn as appropriate to the care and services provided by the hospital.” TJC requires patient education to be interdisciplinary, not delivered by only one person. Furthermore, health care facilities must audit patient education to ensure consistency of teaching and that the health care team members are evaluating the effectiveness of the patient education they give. Cost-effectiveness and timeliness are not requirements of TJC.
DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 239
OBJ: Understand the requirements for patient education. TOP: Patient Education
MSC: NCLEX: Integrated Processes: Teaching/Learning
| a. | Using multiple teaching strategies to accommodate a variety of learning styles |
| b. | Increased effectiveness of teaching by involving the patient in the setting of objectives |
| c. | Paying attention to the timing during the hospitalization and planned discharge date when providing needed information |
| d. | Developing a strong nurse-patient relationship from the beginning of the contract with the patient |
ANS: B
An informed patient is better able to manage health care, is more compliant with the plan of care, and as a result, experiences more positive outcomes. Active learning facilitates the learning process. A patient who is educated regarding his or her condition and plan of care is less likely to refuse the plan of care in lieu of his or her own plan, less likely to complain more when the plan is revised, and less likely to demand explanation for each intervention. The other answer choices are also teaching-learning principles, but they are not reflected in the scenario.
DIF: Cognitive Level: Evaluation REF: Page 243
OBJ: Understand the requirements for patient education. TOP: Patient Teaching
MSC: NCLEX: Integrated Processes: Teaching/Learning
| a. | The baby will not be discharged until the parents have the training. |
| b. | The nurses on the mother-baby division do a better job of teaching baby care. |
| c. | The parents now have the motivation to learn because the baby has been born. |
| d. | The parents have no choice at this point. |
ANS: C
The motivation to learn often results from a life-changing event, such as childbirth or illness. The RN who recognizes the significance of the event can seize the opportunity to explore the patient’s motivation to learn. The baby’s not being discharged until the parents have training is untrue. That the nurses on the mother-baby division do a better job of teaching baby care is irrelevant. That the parents have no choice at this point is an opinion.
DIF: Cognitive Level: Analysis REF: Page 241
OBJ: Compare motivations, facilitators, and barriers to learning.
TOP: Patient Teaching MSC: NCLEX: Integrated Processes: Teaching/Learning
| a. | patient already knows all she needs to know, so more education is not necessary. |
| b. | patient doesn’t know what she doesn’t know, so the circle will continue. |
| c. | patient’s blood sugar is keeping her from thinking clearly, so it is too soon to try to teach her. |
| d. | patient is in denial and that will need to be dealt with before she will accept the diagnosis and thus the education related to it. |
ANS: D
The patient is in denial of her new diagnosis. The RN must use rational thought and convey that logic in the presentation of the facts. The patient must decide that the change is necessary. The RN must understand the patient’s decision and show acceptance of it. The patient’s already knowing all she needs to know so more education is unnecessary is incorrect based on the patient’s statement. The patient’s not knowing what she does not know so the circle will continue is irrelevant. That the patient’s blood sugar is keeping her from thinking clearly is a presumption.
DIF: Cognitive Level: Analysis REF: Page 241
OBJ: Compare motivations, facilitators, and barriers to learning.
TOP: Patient Teaching MSC: NCLEX: Integrated Processes: Teaching/Learning
| a. | The nurse administers pain medication to the new diabetic patient before she starts her teaching just in case the patient is in pain. |
| b. | Thirty minutes before the planned teaching, the nurse assesses the patient for comfort and ensures that the patient has eaten and had the opportunity to complete his bath routine. |
| c. | The nurse decides that conversation works best during a meal, so she plans to teach while the patient eats. |
| d. | The nurse asks the patient’s spouse to leave before beginning the teaching. |
ANS: B
Assessing the patient for comfort 30 minutes before the planned teaching and ensuring that the patient has eaten and had the opportunity to complete his bath routine validates that learning is best facilitated if the learner has had immediate needs met. Administering pain medication to the newly diabetic patient before teaching is incorrect because the nurse should delay (if advisable) medication that may cause distracting side effects. Deciding to teach while the patient eats is incorrect because eating a meal provides an unnecessary distraction. Making the spouse leave may be counterintuitive to the patient’s learning because family may reinforce the patient’s education, advocate for the patient, and seek clarification of the information taught.
DIF: Cognitive Level: Analysis REF: Pages 245, 249
OBJ: Identify factors conducive to learning. TOP: Patient Teaching
MSC: NCLEX: Integrated Processes: Teaching/Learning
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