Chapter 26: Infectious Disease Prevention and Control

Foundations of Nursing in the Community, 3rd Edition Stanhope, Lancaster

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Chapter 26: Infectious Disease Prevention and Control

 

Complete Chapter Questions With Answers

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

MULTIPLE CHOICE

 

  1. Worldwide, what is the number-one cause of death?
a. Chronic diseases (heart disease, cancer, stroke)
b. Infectious diseases
c. Injuries (accidental or purposeful)
d. Terrorism

 

 

ANS:   B

In countries with higher standards of living, where people live longer, chronic diseases—heart disease, cancer, and stroke—are the leading causes of death. Infectious diseases, however, are still the number-one cause of death worldwide.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Knowledge             REF:    p. 485

 

  1. VRSA and MRSA were formerly found primarily in hospitals, but where are outbreaks currently on the rise?
a. Areas where people share dressing or bathing facilities
b. Day care centers and schools
c. Long-term care facilities
d. Senior citizen centers

 

 

ANS:   A

Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VRSA) and methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) remain problems for people who acquire the bacteria in the hospital, but there is a growing incidence of community-acquired MRSA in places where people closely share facilities such as locker rooms, prisons, and other close bathing areas.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Knowledge             REF:    p. 486

 

  1. Which component of the epidemiologic triangle contributes most to a female client developing a vaginal infection caused by fungi after successful treatment of her strep throat with antibiotics?
a. Agent
b. Environment
c. Host
d. Agent and host

 

 

ANS:   B

The antibiotic therapy eliminates a specific pathological agent, but it also may alter the balance of normally occurring organisms in the woman’s body, which causes a change in the vaginal environment and allows normally present fungi to proliferate, resulting in a yeast infection.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Synthesis                REF:    p. 487

 

  1. During an outbreak of hepatitis A, nurses are giving injections of hepatitis A immunoglobulin to selected susceptible persons. What sort of immunity will follow?
a. Active immunity
b. Long-lasting immunity
c. Natural immunity
d. Passive immunity

 

 

ANS:   D

Passive immunity refers to immunization through the transfer of a specific antibody from an immunized individual to a nonimmunized individual, such as the transfer of antibody by administration of an antibody-containing preparation (immune globulin or antiserum). Passive immunity from immune globulin is almost immediate but short-lived. It often is induced as a stopgap measure until active immunity has had time to develop after vaccination.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Application             REF:    p. 487

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