Preschooler Flashcards
Which nursing action would help foster a hospitalized 3-year-old’s sense of autonomy?
- Let the child choose what time to take the oral antibiotics.
- Allow the child to have a doll for medical play.
- Allow the child to administer her own dose of Keflex (cephalexin) via oral syringe.
- Let the child watch age-appropriate videos.
- Allowing preschoolers to participate in actions of which they are capable is an excellent way to enhance their autonomy.
The best method to explain a procedure to a hospitalized preschool-age child is to:
- Show the child a pamphlet with pictures showing the procedure.
- Have the 5-year-old next door tell the 4-year-old about the experience.
- Demonstrate the procedure on a doll.
- Show the child a video of the procedure
- A 4-year-old child understands in very concrete and simple terms. Therefore, medical play is an excellent method for helping to understand the procedure.
A 3-year-old is hospitalized for an ASD repair. The parents have decided to go home for a few hours to spend time with her siblings. The child asks when her mommy and daddy will be back. The nurse’s best response is:
- “Your mommy and daddy will be back after your nap.”
- “Your mommy and daddy will be back at 6:00 p.m.”
- “Your mommy and daddy will be back later this evening.”
- “Your mommy and daddy will be back in 3 hours.
- Preschoolers understand time in relation to events.
Which approach should the nurse use to gather information from a child brought to the ED for suspected child abuse?
- Promise the child that her parents will not know what she tells the nurse.
- Promise the child that she will not have to see the suspected abuser again.
- Use correct anatomical terms to discuss body parts. 4. Tell the child that the abuse is not her fault and that she is a good person.
- Many young children believe abuse or illness is their fault, and they should be reminded they are not to blame. Many children this age believe they have acquired a disease or have been abused because they are bad people.
Which reaction would a nurse expect when giving a preschooler immunizations?
- The child remains silent and still.
- The child cries and tells the nurse that it hurts.
- The child tries to stall the nurse.
- The child remains still while telling the nurse that she is hurting him.
- The common response of a 5-year-old is to cry and protest during an immunization.
What can a nurse do to reinforce a 5-year-old’s intellectual initiative when he asks about his upcoming surgery?
- Answer the child’s questions about his upcoming surgery in simple terms.
- Provide the child with a book that has vivid illustrations about his surgery.
- Tell the child he should wait and ask the doctor his questions.
- Tell the child that she will answer his questions at a later time.
- The child is taking the initiative to ask questions, as all preschoolers do, and the nurse should always answer those questions as appropriately and accurately as possible.
A 5-year-old boy has always been one of the shortest children in class. His mother tells the school nurse that her husband is 6 tall and she is 57. What should the nurse tell the child’s mother?
- He is expected to grow about 3 inches every year from ages 6 to 9 years.
- . He is expected to grow about 2 inches every year from ages 6 to 9 years.
- He should be seen by an endocrinologist for growth-hormone injections.
- His growth should be re-evaluated when he is 7 years old.
- During the school-age years, a child grows approximately 2 inches per year.
The nurse realizes that a 5-year-old’s mother needs further education about the Denver Developmental Screening Test when she states:
- “It screens for gross motor skills.”
- “It screens for fine motor skills.”
- “It screens for intelligence level.”
- “It screens for language development.”
- The Denver Developmental Test does not test a child’s level of intelligence.
A 3-year-old admitted to the hospital with croup has the following vital signs: heart rate 90, respiratory rate 44, blood pressure 100/52, and temperature 98.8°F (37.1°C). The parents ask the nurse if these vital signs are normal. The nurse’s best response is:
- “Your son’s blood pressure is elevated, but the other vital signs are within the normal range..”
- “Your son’s temperature is elevated, but the other vital signs are within the normal range..”
- “Your son’s respiratory rate is elevated, but the other vital signs are within the normal range.”
- “Your son’s heart rate is elevated, but the other vital signs are within the normal range.”
- A normal respiratory rate for a child from 3 to 6 years is 20 to 30 breaths per minute.
Which action is a developmentally appropriate method for eliciting a 4-year-old’s cooperation in obtaining the blood pressure?
- Have the child’s parents help put on the blood pressure cuff.
- Tell the child that if he sits still, the blood pressure machine will go quickly.
- Ask the child if he feels a squeezing of his arm.
- Tell the child that measuring the blood pressure will not hurt.
- Preschool children enjoy games, and it is a good way to elicit their assistance and cooperation during a procedure.
A 4-year-old hospitalized with FTT has orders for daily weights, strict intake and output, and calorie counts. Which action by the nurse would be a concern?
- The nurse weighs the child every morning before breakfast.
- The nurse weighs the child with no clothing except for undergarments.
- The nurse sits with the child while the child eats her meals.
- The nurse weighs the child using the same scale every morning.
- The child should be weighed every day on the same scale before eating. Her weight will not be an accurate reflection if she is fed prior to being weighed.
A 3-year-old is attending her grandfather’s funeral. Her parents told her that her grandfather is in heaven with God. Which statement describes a 3-year-old child’s understanding of spirituality?
- “The body is here with us on Earth, and the spirit is in heaven.”
- “He is in heaven. Is this heaven?”
- “The spirit is no longer in his body.”
- “He won’t need his body in heaven.”
- Three-year-old children are literal thinkers. The child’s parents told her that Grandpa was in heaven. She sees his body, so she thinks they are all in heaven.
A 3-year-old boy has been hospitalized because he fell down the stairs. His mother is crying and states, “This is all my fault.” Which is the nurse’s best response?
- “Accidents happen. You shouldn’t blame yourself.”
- “Falls are one of the most common injuries in this age group.”
- “It may be a good idea to put a baby gate on the stairs.”
- “Your son should be proficient at walking down the stairs by now.”
- Falls are one of the most common injuries, and it may make the parent feel better to know that this is common.