- Allowing the adolescent to choose all their meals.
- Monitoring for refeeding syndrome (e.g., electrolyte imbalances, fluid shifts, cardiac arrhythmias).
- Encouraging rapid weight gain.
- Limiting calorie intake.
Author: ETEA MCQS.COM
No category found.
- Mild redness of the skin.
- Inconsolable crying, abdominal distension, vomiting, or a firm, non-reducible lump.
- Increased urine output.
- Increased appetite.
- Aspirin.
- Acetaminophen or ibuprofen.
- Cough syrup.
- Antiemetics.
- Inserting the needle at a 45-degree angle.
- Cleaning the site with alcohol, pinching up the skin, inserting the needle at a 90-degree angle (or 45 for thin children), and pressing the plunger slowly.
- Massaging the site after injection.
- Reusing needles for convenience.
- Restricting fluid intake.
- Administering opioids for pain management and providing adequate hydration.
- Encouraging vigorous exercise.
- Limiting physical activity completely.
- Normal post-fracture pain.
- Compartment syndrome, requiring urgent notification of the healthcare provider and potential cast removal/fasciotomy.
- Allergic reaction to the cast material.
- Nerve impingement.
- Temperature.
- Weight gain patterns, feeding tolerance, and signs of respiratory distress.
- Skin turgor.
- Presence of rash.
- Placing the infant in a car seat after feeding.
- Maintaining the infant in an upright position for 30 minutes after feeding, and offering smaller, more frequent feeds.
- Offering large volumes of formula.
- Encouraging immediate playtime after feeding.
- Use for acute asthma attacks.
- Use for long-term control, not for acute relief of asthma symptoms.
- Use only when feeling breathless.
- Use only before exercise.
- Providing a warm blanket.
- Immediately notifying the healthcare provider, assisting with intubation, and preparing for emergent neuroimaging.
- Offering oral fluids.
- Encouraging the child to sleep.
- Encouraging large gatherings.
- Stressing meticulous hand hygiene and avoiding exposure to sick individuals.
- Recommending raw fruits and vegetables.
- Encouraging swimming in public pools.
- Checking the infant's temperature.
- Counting the apical pulse for a full minute and withholding the dose if the heart rate is below parameters (e.g., 90-110 bpm, depending on age and institutional policy).
- Assessing the infant's weight.
- Checking the infant's blood pressure.
- Administer at bedtime to promote sleep.
- Administer in the morning with breakfast to minimize appetite suppression and insomnia.
- Administer only when the child is feeling hyperactive.
- Administer on an empty stomach twice a day.
- Impaired esophageal motility.
- Hypertrophy of the pyloric muscle, obstructing gastric outflow.
- Gastric ulceration.
- Immature digestive enzymes.
- Applying a dry dressing.
- Keeping the sac moist with a sterile, non-adherent dressing (e.g., saline-soaked gauze) to prevent drying and infection.
- Covering the sac with a tight bandage.
- Allowing the sac to be exposed to air.
- Complaints of mild throat pain.
- Frequent swallowing, restlessness, or bright red emesis.
- Increased urine output.
- Decreased heart rate.
- Reassure the adolescent that things will get better.
- Immediately establish a safe environment, implement suicide precautions, and notify the healthcare provider.
- Encourage the adolescent to keep feelings to themselves.
- Refer the adolescent to a peer support group.
- Administering an oral antihistamine.
- Immediately administering intramuscular epinephrine.
- Providing a cool compress to the hives.
- Encouraging the child to drink water.
- Assessing abdominal girth.
- Monitoring for signs of increased intracranial pressure (ICP), such as changes in level of consciousness, vital signs, and pupil reactivity.
- Checking blood glucose levels frequently.
- Encouraging prone positioning.
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