NUR 335 Peds Exam 1 Study Guide 50 questions total Chapter 4; Age specific- Chapter 9, 11, 12, 14, 15
6 views 0 purchase
Course
NURSING 335
Institution
NURSING 335
NUR 335 Peds Exam 1 Study Guide
There will be a few medication questions on this exam, more specifically dosage calculations. Please be sure to remember how to convert lbs to kg
50 questions total
Chapter 4; Age specific- Chapter 9, 11, 12, 14, 15
• Pain scale scoring types/which is appr...
There will be a few medication questions on this exam,
more specifically dosage calculations. Please be sure to
remember how to convert lbs to kg
50 questions total
Chapter 4; Age specific- Chapter 9, 11, 12, 14, 15
Pain scale scoring types/which is appropriate to use at what age (FLACC, FACES,
Numbers, etc)
- FLACC: Face Legs Activity Cry Consolability used for 2months-3years old ;
0=no pain; 10=worst pain
- FACES/Wong-Baker: uses facial expressions to indicate pain; ask child to
identify which facial expression they most associate with; used for children as
young as 3 years old
- Numeric pain scale: explain to child that 0 is least amount of pain experienced
and 10 is greatest amount of pain felt; used for children aged 4-17 years old
- CRIES: Crying, Requires oxygenation, Increased VS, Expression, Sleepless; used
for 32 weeks to 20 week post term infants; 0=no pain; 10=worst pain
o Crying (0-2)
o Requires increased oxygen (0-2)
o Increased vital signs (0-2)
o Expression (0-2)
o Sleepless (0-2)
- NIPS: Neonatal Infant Pain Scale; used for average gestational age 33.5 weeks;
0=no pain; 7=worst pain
o Facial expression (0-1)
, o Arms (0-1)
o Cry (0-2)
o Legs (0-1)
o Breathing patterns (0-1)
o State of arousal (0-1)
Developmentally appropriate growth and development for each age category
(newborn, infant, toddler, preschool, school age, and adolescent)
Infant
Age: 2 days-1year
Specifics of physical assessment: Head circumference averages between 33 and 35 cm;
crown to rump length is 31-35cm, approximately equal to head circumference; posterior
fontanel closed between 6-8 weeks of age
Height and weight changes: average weight at birth is 2,700 g to 4,000 g (6-9lbs);
newborns lose up to 10% of their birth weight by 3-4 days of age due to fluid shifts,
meconium loss, and limited intake; birth weight is typically regained by 10th-14th day of
life
- 1st 6 months: infants gain 150-210 g (5-7 oz) weekly; at 6 months weight has
doubled
- Average weight for 6 months old: 7.3 kg
- Average weight at 1 year: 9.75 kg; triple that of birth weight
- Height: increases by 2.5 cm (1in) a month during the 1st 6 months of life and
slows during the 2nd 6 months
- Average height: 65 cm at 6 months; 74cm at 12 months
- Chest assumes more adult contour with lateral diameter becoming larger than
anteroposterior diameter
Nutrition/Elimination patterns: 1st 6 months human milk is most desirable complete diet
for infants; supplemental fluoride may be required in exclusively breastfed children;
, honey should be avoided b/c of risk of botulism; 2nd 6 months addition of solid foods to
infants diet is important
- Meconium: should occur w/in 24-48hrs after birth; description when you chart;
green-black color
- Transitional stools: usually appear by DOL 3; transition from meconium to milk;
green-yellow in color
- Milk stools: usually appear by DOL 4; differences in breast milk and formula
stools
- Breast milk exclusive 1st 6 months
- Supplements: vit D, Iron, fluoride
- Solids begin @ 4-6 months and progress 6-12 months
- Formula types 20kcal/oz w/ iron
- No cows milk or honey <12 months age
- Feeding and elimination patterns
- Oral health
- Food allergy: family history increases risk
- BMI begins at age 2
Reflexes/fine motor/gross motor/locomotion and timing:
- Reflexes: primitive reflexes
- rooting, suck, palmar grasp, tonic neck “fencer”: birth-3-4 months
- plantar grasp: birth to 8 months
- moro “startle”: birth to 4 months
- positive Babinski reflex: birth to 1 year
- Fine motor development: 2-3 months- prehension (grasp) of objects
- 6 months: increased manipulative skill; grasp bottles, feet, and pull into their
mouths
- Transfer object between hands at 7 months
- 8-9 months: gradually turns into pincer grasp
- Pincer grasp at 10 months old
- Remove objects from container at 11 months
, - Build tower of 2 blocks at 12 months
- Gross Motor Development: head control- stable head control is evident at 4
months old
- Head lag in 1st 2 months
- Head control at 4 months
- Parachute reflex by 7 months
- Rolling over: ability to willfully turn from abdomen to the back occurs around 5
months old and ability to turn from back to abdomen occurs at approximately 6
months old
- Sitting: by 7 months, infants can sit alone; by 10 months they can maneuver from
a prone to a sitting position
- Locomotion: involves ability to bear weight; propel forward on all 4 extremities;
stand upright with support; cruise by holding on to furniture and walk alone
- Cephalocaudal direction of development
- Increased coordination of extremities at 4 months
- Crawling at 6-7 months (usually backwards)
- Creeping at 9 months
- Walk with assistance at 11 months
- Walk alone at 12 months
Erikson: concerned with acquiring a sense of trust while overcoming a sense of mistrust;
trust vs mistrust; importance of caregiver-child relationship; and importance of
consistency of care
Piaget: cognition or the ability to know; sensorimotor phase with 6 stages, birth to 24
months
- Stage 1: Reflex stage birth to 1 month
- Stage 2: Primary circular reactions: 1-4 months; includes voluntary acts
- Secondary circular reactions: 4-8 months; imitation, play, affect
- Coordination of secondary schema: 8-12 months
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller ScoreSmart. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $10.39. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.