Free NCLEX-RN Exam Braindumps (page: 90)

Page 90 of 431

A mother continues to breast-feed her 3-month-old infant. She tells the nurse that over the past 3 days she has not been producing enough milk to satisfy the infant. The nurse advises the mother to do which of the following?

  1. "Start the child on solid food."
  2. "Nurse the child more frequently during this growth spurt."
  3. "Provide supplements for the child between breastfeeding so you will have enough milk."
  4. "Wait 4 hours between feedings so that your breasts will fill up."

Answer(s): B

Explanation:

(A) Solid foods introduced before 4­6 months of age are not compatible with the abilities of the GI tract and the nutritional needs of the infant. (B) Production of milk is supply and demand. A common growth spurt occurs at 3 months of age, and more frequent nursing will increase the milk supply to satisfy the infant. (C) Supplementation will decrease the infant's appetite and in turn decrease the milk supply. When the infant nurses less often or with less vigor, the amount of milk produced decreases. (D) Rigid feeding schedules lead to a decreased milk supply, whereas frequent nursing signals the mother's body to produce a correspondingly increased amount of milk.



A mother continues to breast-feed her 3-month-old infant. She tells the nurse that over the past 3 days she has not been producing enough milk to satisfy the infant. The nurse advises the mother to do which of the following?

  1. "Start the child on solid food."
  2. "Nurse the child more frequently during this growth spurt."
  3. "Provide supplements for the child between breastfeeding so you will have enough milk."
  4. "Wait 4 hours between feedings so that your breasts will fill up."

Answer(s): B

Explanation:

(A) Solid foods introduced before 4­6 months of age are not compatible with the abilities of the GI tract and the nutritional needs of the infant. (B) Production of milk is supply and demand. A common growth spurt occurs at 3 months of age, and more frequent nursing will increase the milk supply to satisfy the infant. (C) Supplementation will decrease the infant's appetite and in turn decrease the milk supply. When the infant nurses less often or with less vigor, the amount of milk produced decreases. (D) Rigid feeding schedules lead to a decreased milk supply, whereas frequent nursing signals the mother's body to produce a correspondingly increased amount of milk.



A gravida 2 para 1 client delivered a full-term newborn 12 hours ago. The nurse finds her uterus to be boggy, high, and deviated to the right. The most appropriate nursing action is to:

  1. Notify the physician
  2. Place the client on a pad count
  3. Massage the uterus and re-evaluate in 30 minutes
  4. Have the client void and then re-evaluate the fundus

Answer(s): D

Explanation:

(A) The nurse should initiate actions to remove the most frequent cause of uterine displacement, which involves emptying the bladder. Notifying the physician is an inappropriate nursing action. (B) The pad count gives an estimate of blood loss, which is likely to increase with a boggy uterus; but this action does not remove the most frequent cause of uterine displacement, which is a full bladder. (C) Massage may firm the uterus temporarily, but if a full bladder is not emptied, the uterus will remain displaced and is likely to relax again. (D) The most common cause of uterine displacement is a full bladder.



A gravida 2 para 1 client delivered a full-term newborn 12 hours ago. The nurse finds her uterus to be boggy, high, and deviated to the right. The most appropriate nursing action is to:

  1. Notify the physician
  2. Place the client on a pad count
  3. Massage the uterus and re-evaluate in 30 minutes
  4. Have the client void and then re-evaluate the fundus

Answer(s): D

Explanation:

(A) The nurse should initiate actions to remove the most frequent cause of uterine displacement, which involves emptying the bladder. Notifying the physician is an inappropriate nursing action. (B) The pad count gives an estimate of blood loss, which is likely to increase with a boggy uterus; but this action does not remove the most frequent cause of uterine displacement, which is a full bladder. (C) Massage may firm the uterus temporarily, but if a full bladder is not emptied, the uterus will remain displaced and is likely to relax again. (D) The most common cause of uterine displacement is a full bladder.



Page 90 of 431



Post your Comments and Discuss NCLEX NCLEX-RN exam with other Community members:

Naveen Ahlam commented on November 29, 2024
Great stuff
Anonymous
upvote

Isadora Guimarães commented on November 10, 2024
Very good to study
UNITED STATES
upvote

Marydee commented on April 02, 2020
Just purchased, will see if it is the real deal. Will give a further update later!
Anonymous
upvote