Alexanders Care Of the Patient in Surgery 14th Edition Rothrock
Alexanders Care Of the Patient in Surgery 14th Edition Rothrock
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Chapter 30: Workplace Issues and Staff Safety
Complete Chapter Questions With Answers
Sample Questions Are Posted Below
MULTIPLE CHOICE
| a. | Pulling a large, heavy piece of equipment rather than pushing it |
| b. | The cumulative effect of repeated patient handling events |
| c. | The growing high obesity rate and heavier patients and care providers |
| d. | The cumulative effect of pushing, pulling, and carrying heavy instrument sets and rolling carts |
ANS: B
The high incidence of MSDs among nurses is the cumulative effect of repeated patient handling events, often involving unsafe loads. Nurses and surgical technologists often lift, transfer, or reposition patients on OR beds and transport vehicles, and assist with prepping with their arms outstretched or their bodies bent forward in awkward postures and positions, increasing the risk for injury.
REF: Page 1258
| a. | 25 lb; bend from the knees, not the waist |
| b. | 32 lb; use good body mechanics |
| c. | 37 lb; wear a support belt |
| d. | 35 lb; use assistive lift devices |
ANS: D
The concept behind the lifting equation is to start with a recommended weight that is considered safe for an ideal lift and then to reduce the weight as the task becomes more stressful. In general, the revised equation yields a recommended 35-lb maximum weight limit for use in patient handling tasks. When the weight to be lifted exceeds this limit, assistive devices should be used.
REF: Page 1261
| a. | Transport liquids in covered containers with lids in place. |
| b. | Place bright yellow low-profile pop-up signs in areas where STFs are most likely to occur. |
| c. | Position highly visible yellow absorptive pads in areas where STFs are most likely to occur. |
| d. | Use a dripless, brush-free gel solution for surgical patient skin preps. |
ANS: A
Anticipatory planning to avoid wet spots can reduce the rate of falls. Providing lids for all cups or other open containers being transported helps to avoid spills.
REF: Pages 1261-1262
| a. | Proper footwear |
| b. | Unobstructed pathways |
| c. | Uneven floor surface |
| d. | Lighting |
ANS: C
Hospitals should ensure that there are no uneven floor surfaces, including thresholds, on floors. While 36% of same-level incidents occurred because of floor contaminants such as wet floors, the remainder (64%) of the falls on the same level occurred at transition areas, such as from dry to wet, on uneven floor surfaces, or from one type of floor surface to another. Hospitals should ensure that there are no uneven surfaces, including thresholds, on floors.
REF: Page 1262
| a. | sharps zone. |
| b. | hands-free zone. |
| c. | neutral zone. |
| d. | safety zone. |
ANS: C
The “neutral zone” has been defined as a location on the surgical field where sharps are placed in a predesignated sterile basin or tray or on a magnetic pad, from which the surgeon or assistant can retrieve them. After use, the items are returned to the neutral zone, and the scrub person retrieves them. This technique eliminates hand-to-hand passing of sharps between the surgeon and the scrub person, so that no two individuals touch the same sharp at the same time.
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