A patient with leukemia has completed a chemotherapy cycle a…

A patient with leukemia has completed a chemotherapy cycle and is being discharged home with a clinic visit scheduled in one week. Which symptoms can usually be tracked and discussed at that visit unless they become severe or rapidly worsen? Select all that apply.

You are the charge nurse on a 32-bed surgical unit during ev…

You are the charge nurse on a 32-bed surgical unit during evening rounds. Several bedside nurses on your unit call with new patient changes. For which situations should you direct the bedside nurse to activate the Rapid Response Team immediately, before routine provider notification? Select all that apply.

A 41-year-old patient with Crohn disease presents with cramp…

A 41-year-old patient with Crohn disease presents with crampy abdominal pain that has become constant over 6 hours. The abdomen is distended. Vitals: T 38.6°C (101.5°F), HR 112, BP 100/62, RR 22. The patient is nauseated, has had no flatus for 24 hours, and vomited green fluid. Bowel sounds were high-pitched earlier but are now absent; palpation elicits involuntary guarding. Which assessment cluster requires immediate intervention?

A 58-year-old with cirrhosis and hematemesis arrives pale an…

A 58-year-old with cirrhosis and hematemesis arrives pale and clammy. Two large-bore IVs are placed; octreotide is started; 1 L LR given and 1 unit PRBCs is infusing. Current data: BP 86/52 mm Hg, HR 118/min, RR 24/min, SpO₂ 96% on 2 L NC, urine output 10 mL in the last hour. Which bedside measurement signals the need for the most immediate intervention?

A 55-year-old patient in urgent care reports 2 days of progr…

A 55-year-old patient in urgent care reports 2 days of progressive abdominal pain and anorexia. Vitals: T 38.0°C (100.4°F), HR 96, BP 132/76, RR 16. Labs: WBC 13,200/µL. The patient denies vomiting. Which assessment finding would the nurse expect with uncomplicated diverticulitis? Which assessment finding is most consistent with this diagnosis?

Thirty minutes after a large-volume paracentesis removing 6….

Thirty minutes after a large-volume paracentesis removing 6.0 L, a patient with cirrhosis reports lightheadedness when turning in bed. Orders: vitals every 15 minutes for 1 hour, strict I&O, occlusive dressing, bedrest 1 hour, albumin 25% IV now, and 500 mL normal saline IV bolus only if systolic BP < 90 mmHg. Vitals: BP 94/56, HR 112, RR 18, SpO₂ 98% on room air. The dressing is dry with minimal serous strike-through. What is the nurse’s priority actioN?