- Confront the patient about their discriminatory remarks immediately.
- Document the behavior and continue to provide professional, non-judgmental care.
- Refuse to provide care to the patient due to personal offense.
- Request a different nurse be assigned to the patient.
Author: ETEA MCQS.COM
No category found.
- Autonomy
- Veracity
- Beneficence
- Fidelity
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Justice
- Confidentiality
- Confirm the patient is on the placebo to encourage them to withdraw.
- Suggest the patient discuss their concerns with the principal investigator.
- Tell the patient that they are on the active drug to maintain hope.
- Disclose the blinding status if symptoms worsen further.
- Avoid interfering to prevent embarrassment.
- Offer to complete the colleague's charting.
- Report the technical incompetence to the charge nurse for appropriate training or intervention.
- Provide one-on-one technical training to the colleague during patient care.
- Autonomy
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Justice
- Begin resuscitation as per the physician's order.
- Resuscitate while quickly checking the chart.
- Immediately inform the physician and family of the DNR order and advocate for its adherence.
- Wait for the family to clarify their wishes.
- Autonomy
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Justice
- Fidelity
- Conscientious objection
- Advocacy
- Veracity
- Administer the medication as ordered, ignoring the patient's doubt.
- Explain the medication again and reassure the patient, then administer it.
- Withhold the medication until the prescribing physician can be consulted to clarify the patient's concerns.
- Ask the patient to describe their usual pill.
- Work harder and longer hours to compensate.
- Resign immediately due to unsafe conditions.
- Document concerns, communicate them through official channels (e.g., charge nurse, union, nursing administration), and advocate for systemic changes.
- Complain openly to patients and families.
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Autonomy
- Fidelity
- Follow the administration's suggestion to protect the hospital.
- Accept full blame for the error.
- Accurately and honestly report their involvement and the circumstances of the error to relevant parties and in official documentation.
- Conceal the error to avoid personal blame.
- Autonomy
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Justice
- Autonomy
- Fidelity
- Non-maleficence
- Veracity
- Rely on the family member for translation to save time.
- Use a certified medical interpreter to ensure accurate communication and informed consent.
- Provide written materials in the patient's language without verbal translation.
- Ask the patient if they understand after the family member translates.
- Autonomy
- Non-maleficence
- Beneficence
- Justice
- Administer care based on the outdated information.
- Document a note in the chart about the inaccuracy and proceed with care based on current assessment.
- Refuse to provide care until the chart is fully corrected.
- Inform the patient about the inaccuracies and let them resolve it.
- Allow the signing to proceed, assuming the physician has assessed capacity.
- Obtain a second signature from a family member.
- Stop the signing process and inform the physician that the patient's capacity for informed consent appears compromised.
- Document that the patient signed the form.
Top Contributors
- 18380 Points
- 24 Points
7 Points