Quiz 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Why are vital signs checked?

A
  • Monitor body systems
  • detect changes in health status
  • evaluate effectiveness of interventions
  • identify life threatening warning signs
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2
Q

When are vital signs checked?

A

Performed on a regular basis.

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3
Q

What is the frequency of taking vital signs determined by?

A
  • physician and/or nursing judgment
  • clients condition
  • facility standards
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4
Q

How often should you check the vital signs for:

Stable patient, post surgical patient, critical/unstable patient

A

Stable- every 4-8 hrs
Post surgery- every 15-60 min
Critical/unstable- every 5 min

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5
Q

How to interpret vital signs

A
  1. Compare patient values to normal values

2. Compare patients values to previous values

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6
Q
  • Oral (under the tongue)- most common site
  • ear (tympanic)- used for adults and children
  • forehead (temporal)- infants/small children
  • axillary (axilla of arm)- healthy newborns
  • Rectal- do NOT use for newborns, patients with low white counts, spinal cord injuries, quadriplegics, diarrhea, rectal surgeries
A

Ways to take temperature

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7
Q

How to change F -> C

A

(F-32) x 5/9

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8
Q

How to change C -> F

A

(C x 9/5) + 32

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9
Q

What is the apical pulse and where do you find it?

A

Apical pulse- most accurate site for checking pulse. Found at apex of the heart at point of maximal impulse (PMI).

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10
Q

How long should apical pulse be counted for?

A

1 minute

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11
Q
  1. temporal- side of head at temple
  2. carotid- side of neck below jaw
  3. brachial- inner side of elbow
  4. radial- thumb side of inner wrist (MOST COMMON PERIPHERAL SITE)
  5. femoral- bend of leg at groin
  6. popliteal-behind knee, inner side
  7. posterior tibial- below inner ankle
  8. dorsialis pedis- top of foot
A

8 peripheral pulse locations

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12
Q

Temperature: 95.9- 99.5 F (35.5 - 37.5 C)

Pulse: 60-100 BPM

Respirations 12-20 BPM

Blood pressure: systolic- 90-120 mmHG
diastolic- 60-80 mmHG

Pulse oximetry- > 95% saturation of peripheral oxygen

A

normal ranges of vital signs for adults

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13
Q

What number is systolic when writing blood pressure? What number is diastolic

A
Systolic = top
Diastolic = bottom
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14
Q

What is the peak phase of BP? What is the Resting phase?

A
Systolic = peak phase
Diastolic = resting phase
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15
Q

What is the proper name for a blood pressure measurer

A

Sphygmomanometer

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16
Q

What is hypertension? When is it diagnosed? How Mmkay times does it need to be tested?

A
  • When blood pressure is higher than normal
  • Diagnosed when:

Systolic is > 140 mmHg OR diastolic > 90 mmHG

  • Tested on two or more separate occasions
17
Q

What is primary/essential hypertension? What percentage of hypertension does it account for?

A
  • Primary/essential hypertension- diagnosed when there is no known cause for the disease
  • 90%
18
Q

Nurses can delegate the activity of taking vital signs. True or false

19
Q

If a nurse delegates the responsibility of taking vitals to someone else, what is SHE responsible for?

A
  • Interpretation of vital signs
  • Vital sign trends
  • decisions based on abnormal findings
20
Q

What is the most frequent assessment you’ll make as a nurse?

A

Vital signs