Maternal and Child Study Guide Chapter 1
- Which factor significantly contributed to the shift from home births to hospital births in
- Puerperal sepsis was identified as a risk factor in labor and delivery.
- Forceps were developed to facilitate difficult births.
- The importance of early parental-infant contact was identified.
- Technologic developments became available to physicians.
the early 20th century?
- Family-centered maternity care developed in response to
- demands by physicians for family involvement in childbirth.
- the Sheppard-Towner Act of 1921.
- parental requests that infants be allowed to remain with them rather than in a
- changes in pharmacologic management of labor.
nursery.
- Which setting for childbirth allows the least amount of parent-infant contact?
- Labor/delivery/recovery/postpartum room
- Birth center
- Traditional hospital birth
- Home birth
- As a result of changes in health care delivery and funding, a current trend seen in the
- increased hospitalization of children.
pediatric setting is
- decreased number of children living in poverty.
- an increase in ambulatory care.
- decreased use of managed care.
- The Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program provides
- well-child examinations for infants and children living at the poverty level.
- immunizations for high-risk infants and children.
- screening for infants with developmental disorders.
- supplemental food supplies to low-income pregnant or breastfeeding women.
- In most states, adolescents who are not emancipated minors must have the permission of
- treatment for drug abuse.
- treatment for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
- accessing birth control.
- surgery.
their parents before
- The maternity nurse should have a clear understanding of the correct use of a clinical
- are developed and implemented by nurses.
- are used primarily in the pediatric setting.
- set specific time lines for sequencing interventions.
- are part of the nursing process.
pathway. One characteristic of clinical pathways is that they
- The fastest growing group of homeless people is
- men and women preparing for retirement.
- migrant workers.
- single women and their children.
- intravenous (IV) substance abusers.
- A nurse wishes to work to reduce infant mortality in the United States. Which activity
- Creating pamphlets in several different languages using an interpreter.
- Assisting women to enroll in Medicaid by their third trimester.
- Volunteering to provide prenatal care at community centers.
- Working as an intake counselor at a women's shelter.
would this nurse most likely participate in?
- The intrapartum woman sees no need for a routine admission fetal monitoring strip. If she
- Consult the family of the woman.
- Notify the provider of the situation.
- Document the woman's refusal in the nurse's notes.
- Make a referral to the hospital ethics committee.
continues to refuse, what is the first action the nurse should take?
- Which statement is true regarding the "quality assurance" or "incident" report?
- The report assures the legal department that no problem exists.
- Reports are a permanent part of the patient's chart.
- The nurse's notes should contain, "Incident report filed, and copy placed in chart."
- This report is a form of documentation of an event that may result in legal action.
- Elective abortion is considered an ethical issue because
- abortion law is unclear about a woman's constitutional rights.
- the Supreme Court ruled that life begins at conception.
- a conflict exists between the rights of the woman and the rights of the fetus.
- it requires third-party consent.
- Which woman would be most likely to seek prenatal care?
- A 15-year-old who tells her friends, "I don't believe I'm pregnant."
- A 20-year-old who is in her first pregnancy and has access to a free prenatal clinic.
- A 28-year-old who is in her second pregnancy and abuses drugs and alcohol.
- A 30-year-old who is in her fifth pregnancy and delivered her last infant at home.
- A woman who delivered her baby 6 hours ago complains of headache and dizziness. The
nurse administers an analgesic but does not perform any assessments. The woman then has a tonic-clonic seizure, falls out of bed, and fractures her femur. How would the actions of the nurse be interpreted in relation to standards of care?
a. Negligent: the nurse failed to assess the woman for possible complications
b. Negligent: because the nurse medicated the woman
- Not negligent: the woman had signed a waiver concerning the use of side rails
d. Not negligent: the woman did not inform the nurse of her symptoms as soon as
they occurred