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Bullets PEDIATRIC NSG 11. Topical corticosteroids shouldn’t be used on chickenpox lesions.

1. A child with HIV-positive blood should receive inactivated 12. A serving size of a food is usually 1 tablespoon for each year of age.
poliovirus vaccine (IPV) rather than oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) 13. The characteristic of fifth disease (erythema infectiosum) is
immunization. erythema on the face, primarily the cheeks, giving a “slapped face”
2. To achieve postural drainage in an infant, place a pillow on the appearance.
nurse’s lap and lay the infant across it. 14. Adolescents may brave pain, especially in front of peers. Therefore,
3. A child with cystic fibrosis should eat more calories, protein, offer analgesics if pain is suspected or administer the medication if
vitamins, and minerals than a child without the disease. the client asks for it.
4. Infants subsisting on cow’s milk only don’t receive a sufficient 15. Signs that a child with cystic fibrosis is responding to pancreatic
amount of iron (ferrous sulfate), which will eventually result in iron enzymes are the absence of steatorrhea, improved appetite, and
deficiency anemia. absence of abdominal pain.
5. A child with an undiagnosed infection should be placed in isolation. 16. Roseola appears as discrete rose-pink macules that first appear on
6. An infant usually triples his birth weight by the end of his first year. the trunk and that fade when pressure is applied.
7. Clinical signs of a dehydrated infant include lethargy, irritability, dry 17. A ninety degree-ninety degree traction is used for fracture of a
skin decreased tearing, decreased urinary output, and increased child’s femur or tibia.
pulse. 18. One sign of developmental dysplasia is limping during ambulation.
8. Appropriate care of a child with meningitis includes frequent 19. Circumcision wouldn’t be performed on a male child with
assessment of neurologic signs (such as decreasing levels of hypospadias because the foreskin may be needed during surgical
consciousness, difficulty to arouse) and measuring the reconstruction.
circumference of the head because subdural effusions and 20. Neonatal abstinence syndrome is manifested in central nervous
obstructive hydrocephalus can develop. system hyperirritability (for example, hyperactive Moro reflex) and
9. Expected clinical findings in a newborn with cerebral palsy include gastrointestinal symptoms (watery stools).
reflexive hypertonicity and criss-crossing or scissoring leg 21. Classic signs of shaken baby syndrome are seizures, slow apical
movements. pulse difficulty breathing, and retinal hemorrhage.
10. Papules, vesicles, and crust are all present at the same time in the 22. An infant born to an HIV-positive mother will usually receive AZT
early phase of chickenpox. (zidovudine) for the first 6 weeks of life.
23. Infants born to an HIV-positive mother should receive all 34. Developmental theories include Havighurst’s age periods and
immunizations of schedule. developmental tasks; Freud’s five stages of development;
24. Blood pressure in the arms and legs is essentially the same in 35. Kohlberg’s stages of moral development; Erikson’s eight stages of
infants. development; and Piaget’s phases of cognitive development.
25. When bottle-feeding a newborn with a cleft palate, hold the infant’s 36. The primary concern with infusing large volumes of fluid is
head in an upright position. circulatory overload. This is especially true in children and infants,
26. Because of circulating maternal antibodies that will decrease the and in clients with renal disease.
immune response, the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine 37. Certain hazards present increased risk of harm to children and occur
shouldn’t be given until the infant has reached 1 year of age. more often at different ages. For infants, more falls, burns, and
27. Before feeding an infant any fluid that has been warmed, test a drop suffocation occur; for toddlers, there are more burns, poisoning, and
of the liquid on your own skin to prevent burning the infant. drowning for preschoolers, more playground equipment accidents,
28. A newborn typically wets 6 to 10 diapers per day. choking, poisoning, and drowning; and for adolescents, more
29. Although microwaving food and fluids isn’t recommend for infants, automobile accidents, drowning, fires, and firearm accidents.
it’s commonplace in the United States. Therefore the family should 38. A child in Bryant’s traction who’s younger than age 3 or weighs less
be toughs to test the temperature of the food or fluid against their than 30 lb (13.6 kg) should have the buttocks slightly elevated and
own skin before allowing it to be consumed by the infant. clear or the bed. The knees should be slightly flexed, and the legs
30. The most adequate diet for an infant in the first 6 months of life is should be extended at a right angle to the body.
breast milk. 39. The body provides the traction mechanism.
31. An infant can usually chew food by 7 months, hold spoon by 9 40. In an infant, a bulging fontanel is the most significant sign of
month, and drink fluid from a cup by 1 year of age. increasing intracranial pressure.
32. Choking from mechanical obstruction is the leading cause of death
(by suffocation) for infants younger than 1 year of age.
33. Failure to thrive is a term used to describe an infant who falls below
the fifth percentile for weight and height on a standard measurement
chart.

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