Clinical Reasoning Cases in Nursing
7th EditionJulie S Snyder, Mariann M Harding
2,512 solutions
The Human Body in Health and Disease
7th EditionGary A. Thibodeau, Kevin T. Patton
1,505 solutions
Pharmacology and the Nursing Process
7th EditionJulie S Snyder, Linda Lilley, Shelly Collins
388 solutions
Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning
4th EditionG Haff, N Triplett
121 solutions
- Science
- Medicine
- Nursing
-
Flashcards
-
Learn
-
Test
-
Match
-
Flashcards
-
Learn
-
Test
-
Match
CDI - LVN PROGRAM
Terms in this set (93)
What are the steps of developing a care plan?
ADOPIE
Assessment
Diagnosis
Outcome identification
Planning
Implementing
Evaluating
Nursing Process
six-step systematic method for giving patient care; involves assessing, diagnosing, outcomes identification planning, implementing, and evaluating
(Outcomes identification and planning often combined when creating a nursing care plan)
Subjective Data
things a person tells you about that you cannot observe through your senses; symptoms
Objective Data
information that is seen, heard, felt, or smelled by an observer; signs
Primary vs. Secondary Source
Primary: Patient and most accurate.
Secondary: Family members, significant other, medical records, diagnostic procedures, and specialists.
Nursing Diagnosis
A nursing diagnosis revolves around the patients RESPONSE to what is happening.
(ex.
- Anxiety is the response to asthma.
- Impaired mobility is the response of a Stroke.)
Medical Diagnosis
the identification of a disease or condition by a doctor
(Ex. Hypertension, Diabetes, Dementia, Obesity)
How is data collected on assessment?
Physical assessment with interview questions/assessment questions
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
(level 1) Physiological Needs,
(level 2) Safety and Security
(level 3) Relationships, Love and Affection
(level 4) Self Esteem
(level 5) Self Actualization
Nursing
the protection, promotion, and optimization of health and abilities, prevention of illness and injury, alleviation of suffering through the diagnosis and treatment of human response, and advocacy in the care of individuals, families, communities, and populations
Outcomes Identification
identifies expected outcomes for a plan individualized to the patient or situation
ANA
American Nurses Association
Assessment
Systematic, dynamic process by which the RN through interaction with patient, family, groups, communities, populations and health care providers, collects and analyzes data (ANA)
Complete assessment
Involves a review and physical examination of all body systems.
(Cognitive, psychosocial, emotional, cultural, and spiritual components)
Focused assessment
Review and examine a specific area of the body.
What does a complete assessment entail?
Cognitive, psychosocial, emotional, cultural, and spiritual components.
Types of data? (3)
Cue, Subjective, Objective
Cue
pieces of data, actual or potential problem.
When is obtaining information from secondary sources
When the patient is unable to supply information.
What type of data is collected during interview process?
- Biographic data
- Reason patient is seeking health care
- History of present illness
-Past health history
- Environmental history
- Psychosocial history
What type of data is collected during the physical examination?
- Head-to-toe format
- Guided by subjective data
Diagnosis
Identify the type and cause of a health conditions
"A clinical judgment about the patient's response to actual or potential health conditions or needs. Diagnoses provide the basis for determination of a plan of care to achieve expected outcomes"
Etiology
the study of the causes of diseases
Nursing Diagnosis Examples
-
Risk for self harm - Ineffective coping - Impaired nutrition - Impaired mobility - Chronic pain
- Risk for falls
- Knowledge deficit - Confusion
- Constipation
- Acute infection
- Fluid Volume
- Overload
Medical Diagnosis examples
- Depression
- Diabetes mellitus - Hypertension
- Dementia
- Bowel obstruction - Pneumonia
- Congestive Heart - Failure
Components of Nursing Diagnosis
-Nursing diagnosis
-Definition of Nursing Diagnosis (Clear, precise description of problem)
-Contributing/etiological/related factors ("related to" and risk factors)
-Defining characteristics
Acute vs. Chronic
new onset vs. long standing
Short term vs. Long term
Acute needs may pose more of a
threat
Chronic needs usually develop over period of time
Attend to alteration in acute phase before they evolve into chronic alteration
Etiology and Risk Factors examples
- Foley catheter
- Central line
- Bed rest/immobility
- Weakness
- Poor appetite
- Chronic disease
Actual nursing diagnosis
represents a condition that is currently present.
-Problem Statement (r/t)
- Etiology (risk factors) (AEB)
- Defining characteristics
Example of actual nursing diagnosis
• Impaired skin integrity r/t immobility AEB 3 cm stage III pressure ulcer on sacrum
- Fluid volume overload r/t congestive heart failure AEB +3 edema to b/l lower extremities, crackles in b/l lung bases, and blood pressure 168/98
What is ADOPIE?
Nursing Process:
Assessment
Diagnosis
Outcome identification
Planning
Implementation
Evaluation
What does r/t mean?
related to
What does AEB stand for?
as evidenced by
Example of risk diagnosis
- Risk for falls r/t dementia and lower extremity weakness
- Risk for impaired skin integrity r/t bowel incontinence
T/F: A Medical diagnosis may change as care is provided or the condition changes.
FALSE
Nursing diagnosis may change or resolve as care is provided or the condition changes.
A medical diagnosis will NOT change
Outcome Identification/Planning
Outcomes statement indicates the degree of wellness desired, expected or possible for the patient to achieve
Planning
The nurse establishes priorities of care and nursing interventions are chosen that will best address the nursing diagnosis
(patient-centered goals/desired patient outcomes)
T/F : Physiologic needs come BEFORE safety and security
TRUE
T/F: Safety and security needs come BEFORE love and belonging needs
TRUE
Physician-prescribed interventions
Actions ordered by a physician for a nurse or other health care provider to
perform
(Medications, wound care, diagnostic tests)
Nurse-prescribed interventions
Actions the nurse can legally order or begin independently
(Providing a back massage, turning patient every 2 hours, monitoring for complications)
What should nursing order include?
• Date
• Signature of the nurse responsible for the
plan of care
• Subject (who will carry out the activity)
• Action verb
• Qualifying details
What is the product of the nursing process?
Written nursing care plan
Implementation
The nurse and other members of the team put the established plan into action to promote outcome achievement
T/F: Documentation is a vital component of the implementation phase
TRUE
"If it was not charted, it was not done" is a constant principle of nursing
Make sure to reassess after carrying out an intervention!
following pain medication, BP medication, antibiotic
• heat pack vs cold pack
• TENS therapy, massage therapy
Evaluation
A determination is made about the extent to which the established outcomes have been achieved
(The plan of care is changed during this phase of the nursing process)
THREE (3) Evaluation judgments/decisions:
- The outcome was achieved
- The outcome was not achieved
- The outcome was partially achieved
Role of LVN (Nursing process)
- Provide direct bedside nursing care
- This direct care position allows the LPN/LVN to closely observe, prioritize, intervene, and evaluate the care provided to and for the patient
ADOPIE
What is the major advantage of using the nursing process to identify nursing diagnosis?
1. Helps nurses identify a disease or illness that creates problems for the
patient
2. Allows nurses to use clinical judgment about actual or potential health problems
3. permits nurses to use standardized care plans for common patient problems
4. Limits the type of problems that nurses are responsible for treating
ANSWER: 2
The nurse must gather and analyze data to make clinical judgments and determine appropriate nursing diagnoses/patient problem statements.
The nurse observes that the patient is pale; diaphoretic; slightly hunched over; and demonstrates deep rapid breathing. Based on the objective data, which question will the nurse use to elicit the most relevant subjective data?
1. "Do you feel chilled or feverish?"
2. "Do you need some help to sit up?"
3. "Are you having any pain?"
4. "When did you start feeling like this?"
ANSWER: 3
There are a number of conditions that could cause the
patient to be pale, diaphoretic, and tachypneic. Based on the objective cues, the nurse would use critical thinking and conclude that respiratory and cardiac causes would have priority over metabolic or renal causes. Then the nurse will use a series of closed questions to try to determine the cause. In other words, chest pain suggests cardiac or respiratory problems. Fever and chills are related to infection. Difficulty sitting could be related to neurologic dysfunction, systemic weakness, or
musculoskeletal problems.
Which intervention would be considered a prescribed nursing intervention?
1. Obtain and report peak and trough levels for vancomycin x3 days
2. Administer IV 5% dextrose and half saline for 8 hours
3. Make a referral to physical therapy to teach the patient to transfer from bed to wheelchair
4. Encourage independence in hygiene by supervising while the patient washes face and hands.
ANSWER 4
Nurse prescribed interventions are actions that the nurse can independently determine and initiate. The other interventions require a provider's order/prescription.
What would be an example of a collaborative problem?
1. Edema
2. Anxiety
3. Coping
4. Social Isolation
ANSWER 1
Edema would be a collaborative problem, because the provider would identify the medical
diagnosis that is causing or contributing to the edema and then prescribe medication or other therapies. The nurse would identify a nursing diagnosis such as Excess fluid volume, and design interventions such as position change, review dietary aspects, and reinforce medication compliance.
The post-surgical patient reports that he is having lower abdominal pain. What would the nurse include in the focused physical assessment?
1. Check peripheral
pulses ans sensation
2. Check for rigidity and rebound tenderness
3. Assess the patients mental status
4. Auscultate the lung sounds
ANSWER 2
Palpating the abdomen to locate any rigidity or rebound tenderness would be part of the focused physical assessment related to the patient's report of abdominal pain.
An older adult patient is wetting the bed because he is unable to independently get up and go to the bathroom. For this particular patient, which phase of the nursing process is most critical to address the patients needs?
1. Assessment
2. Diagnosis
3. Planning
4. Evaluation
ANSWER 3
All phases of the nursing process are linked together. However, for this patient the problem is straightforward, and the solution seems simple, but careful planning is essential, because assisting this patient to the bathroom will be very time-consuming
The caregiver of a patient with Alzheimers disease reports that the patient is unsteady and easily loses his balance, leaves the house, and needs coaching to accomplish tasks. Which nursing diagnosis will apply to this patient? (Select all that apply)
1. Acute confusion
2. Self-care deficit for activities of daily living
3. Wandering
4. Potential for caregiver role strain
5. Potential for falls.
Answer 2, 3, 4, 5
Patients with Alzheimer's disease will have many problems. Acute confusion should not apply, unless the patient has delirium or a new injury/insult to the neurologic system. Chronic confusion would more accurately describe the patient's baseline behavior.
The nurse is performing the assessment phase of the nursing process. Which nursing action would be done during this phase?
1. Observe a
patients ability to independently perform AM hygienic care
2. Adjust standardized care plan to meet the needs of the individual patient
3. take BP 30 minutes after giving medication
4. Assist the patient to make a list of questions to ask the provider
Answer 1
Observing the patient's abilities is an assessment that will guide the type of interventions that the nurse selects. Modifying a standardized plan is part of the planning phase. Taking
the blood pressure after medication is evaluating the efficacy of the intervention. Assisting the patient to make a list of questions would be done during the intervention phase.
The nurse is caring for a patient who is 1 day postoperative for abdominal surgery. The patient reports that the abdominal pain is unrelieved by medication. he also reports feeling dizzy, lightheaded, and slightly nauseated. What objective data should the nurse collect first?
1. Assess the dressing and observe for blood or drainage.
2. look at the most recent BP and pulse
3. Check the last hematocrit and hemoglobin results
4. Assess the abdomen for distention and rigidity
Answer 1
The nurse would observe the dressing for blood or drainage but would not remove the dressing because the surgeon usually removes the dressing for the first time. If the dressing is saturating through, the nurse would reinforce
it. The nurse would check the blood pressure and pulse and assess the abdomen because postoperative patients have risk for hemorrhage or peritonitis. I
According to Maslows Hierarchy of needs; what category is Acute pain?
1. Esteem
2. Physiologic
3. Self actualization
4. Safety and Security
ANSWER: 2
According to Maslows Hierarchy of needs; what category is rRisk for injury?
1. Love and belongingness
2. Physiologic
3. Self actualization
4. Safety and Security
ANWSER: 4
According to Maslows Hierarchy of needs; what category is Hopelessness?
1. Esteem
2. love and belongingness
3. Self actualization
4. Physiologic
ANSWER: 3
According to Maslows Hierarchy of needs; what category is Decreased cardiac output?
1. Love and belongingness
2. Physiologic
3. Esteem
4. Safety and Security
ANSWER: 2
What are the sources of evidence that re used to support evidence based practice? (Select all that apply)
1. Research
2. Practice-generated data
3. Clinical expertise
4. Healthcare consumer values and preferences
ANSWER: ALL APPLY (1,2,3,4)
The nurse has identified 6 relevant nursing diagnosis's that would apply to the patients care. Which nursing action is the most important?
1. Determine how the nursing diagnoses relate to the medical diagnosis's
2. Plan interventions that will address the six problems that were identified.
3. Prioritize the nursing diagnosis's from most urgent to least urgent
4. Ask the patient if the
identified problems are consistent with his/her view
Answer 3
Prioritize the problems/nursing diagnoses, so that the patient's health and safety are maintained; immediately intervene if necessary. The other actions are also part of a complete and comprehensive nursing care plan.
Cluster cues
a group of cues that are related to each other that may suggest a health problem
ex. patient can only make sounds but no speech, bed bound, and incontinent. you see that theres a pattern of her incontinence and making sounds. you make the connection that she tries to communicate toileting needs but cannot express it, so you give her a call light, and she isn't incontinent anymore
The emergency department nurse is gathering initial data on a child suspected of epiglottitis. Which is the nurse's highest priority
1.
Check for a patent airway.
2. Prepare the child for an x-ray. 3. Prepare the child for tracheotomy.
4.Assist the primary health care provider with intubation
ANSWER: 1
The nurse is planning to put aneurysm precautions in place for the client with a cerebral aneurysm. Which item should be included as part of the precautions?
1. Limiting cigarettes to 3 per day
2.Allowing out-of-bed activities as
tolerated
3.Allowing 1 cup of caffeinated coffee per day
4.Maintaining the head of the bed at 15 degree
ANSWER: 4
The nurse is caring for a hospitalized child with a history of seizures who is receiving oral phenytoin sodium. Which should be included in the plan of care for this child?
1.Monitoring intake and output 2.Providing oral hygiene, especially care of the gums 3.Administering medications 1 hour before food intake 4.Checking the heart rate before administering the phenytoin
ANSWER: 2
During which of the five steps in the nursing process does the nurse determine whether outcomes of care are achieved?
1. Implementation
2. Evaluation
3. Planning
4. Analysis
ANSWER: 2
Evaluation occurs when actual outcomes are compared with expected outcomes that reflect goal achievement. If the goal is achieved, the patient's needs are met.
When considering the nursing process, the word "observe" is to "assess" as the word "explore" is to which of the following words?
1. Plan
2. Analyze
3. Evaluate
4. Implement
ANSWER: 2
The definitions of the words "observe" and "assess" are similar. Observe means to view something scientifically, and assess means to collect information. The word "analyze" fits the analogy. Explore means to examine. Analysis means to investigate.
Which word best describes the role of the nurse when using the nursing process to meet the needs of the patient holistically?
1. Teacher
2. Advocate
3. Surrogate
4. Counselor
ANSWER: 2
When the nurse supports, protects, and defends a patient from a holistic perspective, the nurse functions as an advocate. Advocacy includes exploring, informing, mediating, and affirming in all areas to help a patient navigate the health-care system, maintain autonomy, and achieve the best possible health outcomes.
Which word is most closely associated with scientific principles?
1. Data
2. Problem
3. Rationale
4. Evaluation
ANSWER: 3
The word "rationale" (justification based on reasoning) is closely associated with the term "scientific principles" (established rules of action). Scientific principles are based on rationales.
A nurse teaches a patient to use visualization to cope with chronic pain. Which step of the nursing process is associated with this nursing intervention?
1. Planning
2. Analysis
3. Evaluation
4. Implementation
ANSWER: 4
This is an example of the implementation step of the nursing process. It is during the implementation step that planned nursing care is delivered
Which action reflects the assessment step of the nursing process?
1. Taking a patient's apical pulse rate every 2 hours after being admitted for an
episode of chest pain
2. Scheduling a patient's fluid intake over 12 hours when the patient has a fluid
restriction
3. Examining a patient
for injury after a patient falls in the bathroom
4. Obtaining a patient's respiratory rate after a nebulizer treatment
ANSWER: 3
This action reflects the assessment step of the nursing process. Assessment involves collecting data via observation, physical examination, and interviewing.
Which should the nurse do during the evaluation step of the nursing process?
1. Set the time frames for
goals.
2. Revise a plan of care.
3. Determine priorities.
4. Establish outcomes.
ANSWER: 2
Revising a plan of care takes place in the evaluation step of the nursing process. If during evaluation it is determined that the goal was not met, the reasons for failure have to be identified and the plan modified.
During which step of the nursing process does determining which actions will be employed to meet the needs of a patient occur?
1. Implementation
2. Assessment
3. Planning
4. Analysis
ANSWER: 3
The identification of nursing actions designed to help a patient achieve a goal occurs during the planning step of the nursing process.
Which information supports the appropriateness of a nursing diagnosis?
1. Defining characteristics
2. Planned interventions
3. Diagnostic
statement
4. Related risk factors
ANSWER: 1
The defining characteristics are the major and minor cues that form a cluster that support or validate the presence of a nursing diagnosis. At least one major defining characteristic must be present for a nursing diagnosis to be considered appropriate for the patient
Which is the primary goal of the assessment phase of the nursing process?
1. Build
trust
2. Collect data
3. Establish goals
4. Validate the medical diagnosis
ANSWER: 2
The primary purpose of the assessment step of the nursing process is to collect data (information) from various sources using a variety of approaches.
Which most directly influences the planning step of the nursing process?
1. Related factors
2. Diagnostic label
3. Secondary factors
4. Medical
diagnosis
ANSWER: 1
Related factors (i.e., "contributing to" factors, etiology) contribute to the problem statement of the nursing diagnosis and directly impact on the planning step of the nursing process. Nursing interventions are selected to minimize or relieve the effects of the related factors. If nursing interventions are appropriate and effective, the human response identified in the problem statement part of the nursing diagnosis will resolve.
When two nursing diagnoses appear closely related, which should the nurse do first to determine which diagnosis most accurately reflects the needs of the patient?
1. Reassess the patient.
2. Examine the related to factors.
3. Analyze the secondary to factors.
4. Review the defining characteristics.
ANSWER: 4
The first thing the nurse should do to differentiate between two closely associated
nursing diagnoses is to compare the data collected to the major and minor defining characteristics of each of the nursing diagnoses being considered.
Which is the primary reason why a nurse performs a physical assessment of a newly admitted patient?
1. Identify if the patient is at risk for falls.
2. Ensure that the patient's skin is totally intact.
3. Identify important information about the patient.
4. Establish a therapeutic
relationship with the patient.
ANSWER: 3
This is the primary purpose of a nursing physical assessment. Data must be collected and then analyzed to determine significance and grouped in meaningful clusters before a nursing diagnosis or plan of care can be made.
A nurse evaluates a patient's response to a nursing intervention. To which aspect of the nursing process is this evaluation most directly related?
1. Goal
2. Problem
3. Etiology
4. Implementation
ANSWER: 1
To evaluate the effectiveness of a nursing action the nurse must compare the actual patient outcome with the expected patient outcome. The expected outcomes are the measurable data that reflect goal achievement, and the actual outcomes are what really happened.
When the nurse considers the nursing process, the word "identify" is to "recognize" as the word "do" is to which of the following words?
1. Plan
2. Analyze
3. Evaluate
4. Implement
ANSWER: 4
This is the correct analogy. The words "identify" and "recognize" have the same definition. They both mean the same as that which is known. The words "do" and "implement" both have the same definition. They both mean to carry out some action.
A nurse is collecting subjective data associated with a patient's anxiety. Which assessment method should be used to collect this information?
1. Observing
2. Inspecting
3. Auscultation
4. Interviewing
ANSWER: 4
Interviewing a patient is the most effective data collection method when collecting subjective data associated with a patient's anxiety. The patient is the primary source for subjective data about beliefs, values, feelings, perceptions, fears, and
concerns.
A nurse is caring for a patient with a urinary elimination problem. Which are accurately stated goals? Select all that apply.
1. "The patient will be taught how to use a bedpan while on bedrest."
2. "The patient will experience fewer incontinence episodes at night."
3. "The patient will transfer independently and safely to a toilet before discharge."
4. "The patient will be assisted to the commode every two hours and whenever
necessary."
5. "The patient will experience one or less events of urinary incontinence daily within 6 weeks."
ANSWER: 3 + 5
3- This is a correctly worded goal. Goals must be patient-centered, measurable, realistic, and include the time frame in which the expected goal is to be achieved.
5- This is a correctly worded goal. Goals must be patient-centered, measurable, realistic, and include the time frame in which the expected goal is to be
achieved.
Which human responses identified by the nurse are examples of objective data? Select all that apply.
1. Irregular radial pulse of 50 beats per minute
2. Wheezing on expiration
3. Temperature of 99 F
4. Shortness of breath
5. Dizziness
ANSWER: 1,2,3
Which patient statements provide subjective data? Select all that apply.
1. "I'm
not sure that I am going to be able to manage at home by myself."
2. "I can call a home-care agency if I feel I need help at home."
3. "What should I do if I have uncontrollable pain at home?" 4. "Will a home health aide help me with my care at home?"
5. "I'm afraid because I live alone and I'm on my own."
ANSWER: 1, + 5
1- Knowing one's own abilities is subjective information because it is the patient's perception and can be verified only by
the patient.
5 - Fear is subjective information because it is the patient's perception and can be verified only by the patient.
A nurse is interviewing a patient at the change of shift. Which patient statements reflect subjective data? Select all that apply.
1. "When I lift my head up off the bed I feel like vomiting."
2. "I just went in the urinal and it needs to be emptied."
3. "My pain feels like a 5 on a scale of 0 to 5."
4.
"The physician said I can go home today."
5. "I ate only 50% of my breakfast."
ANSWER: 1 + 3
A patient is transferred from the emergency department to a medical-surgical unit at 6:30 p.m. The nurse arriving on duty at 8 p.m. reviews the patient's clinical record. Which information documented in the clinical record reflects the evaluation step of the nursing process?
1. Productive cough
2. Seek order
for chest physiotherapy
3. No dizziness reported by the patient
4. Acetaminophen 650 mg administered at 5 p.m.
ANSWER: 3
This statement reflects an evaluation of the patient's response to ambulation.
The nurse assesses a patient and collects a variety of data. Identify the human responses that are subjective data. Select all that apply.
1. Nausea
2. Jaundice
3, Dizziness
4.
Diaphoresis
5. Hypotension
ANSWER: 1 + 3
A pebble dropped into a pond causes ripples on the surface of the water. Which part of the nursing diagnosis is directly related to this concept?
1. Defining characteristics
2. Outcome criteria
3. Etiology
4. Goal
ANSWER: 3
The etiology (also known as related to or contributing factors) are the conditions, situations, or circumstances that cause the development of the human response identified in the problem statement of the nursing diagnosis.
A nurse concludes that a patient's elevated temperature, pulse, and respirations are significant. Which step of the nursing process is being used when the nurse comes to this conclusion?
1. Implementation
2. Assessment
3. Evaluation
4. Analysis
ANSWER: 4
During the analysis step of the nursing process, data are critically explored and interpreted, significance of data is determined, inferences are made and validated, cues and clusters of cues
are compared with the defining characteristics of nursing diagnoses, contributing factors are identified, and nursing diagnoses are identified and organized in order of priority.
Cues
Whether verbal or nonverbal, it is an indirect signal that a patient uses to try to alert the doctor to a question or concern.
Students also viewedSafety
20 terms
Kccarroll09
FOUNDATIONS OF NURSING: Chapter 5 Nursing Process…
85 terms
medic0757Plus
Critical thinking and nursing process
27 terms
joselynv_94
*Chain of Infection
24 terms
greatS_Willis4
Sets found in the same folderNursing Process Critical Thinking
103 terms
Carolina_Pauta
Chapter 5: Nursing Process & Critical Thinking
34 terms
Shanu_LoyaPlus
Nursing Process/Critical Thinking
223 terms
emeraldsky7
Chapter 4 - Tissue
40 terms
kemelypaola
Other sets by this creatorCH.30 Health Promotion for Infant, child…
59 terms
Abbottce8Plus
HEALTH PROMOTION AND PREGNANCY
40 terms
Abbottce8Plus
ATI MEDSURG Q'S
65 terms
Abbottce8Plus
SENSORY
13 terms
Abbottce8Plus
Recommended textbook solutionsPharmacology and the Nursing Process
7th EditionJulie S Snyder, Linda Lilley, Shelly Collins
388 solutions
The Human Body in Health and Disease
7th EditionGary A. Thibodeau, Kevin T. Patton
1,505 solutions
Medical Assisting: Administrative and Clinical Procedures
7th EditionKathryn A Booth, Leesa Whicker, Sandra Moaney Wright, Terri D Wyman
1,020 solutions
Essentials of Medical Language
4th EditionDavid M Allan, Rachel Basco
404 solutions
Other Quizlet setsCounting Principle
13 terms
Diana_Jud3
Midterm III
25 terms
Cassandra_Gehring
Development Psychology
97 terms
MICHELLE_0199883