Asked by princess marian escalera on May 14, 2024

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The patient is presenting to the hospital with a high fever and a productive cough.He says that he hasn't felt right since he returned from visiting Somalia about a month before admission.He also states that he has lost about 20 pounds in the last month and frequently wakes up in the middle of the night sweaty and "clammy." What should the nurse prepare to do?

A) Place the patient on contact isolation.
B) Place the patient in a negative-pressure room.
C) Place the patient on droplet precautions.
D) Use standard precautions only.

Productive Cough

A cough that results in the expulsion of mucus or phlegm from the respiratory tract.

Negative-Pressure Room

A specialized hospital room designed to contain airborne contaminants within the room by maintaining a lower air pressure inside than in the surrounding areas.

Contact Isolation

A health care protocol used to prevent the spread of infectious agents that can be transmitted through direct or indirect contact.

  • Gain insight into the required nursing procedures and cautionary steps for patients quarantined because of numerous infections.
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Verified Answer

AH
Amber HickmanMay 18, 2024
Final Answer :
B
Explanation :
Suspect tuberculosis (TB)in any patient with respiratory symptoms lasting longer than 3 weeks accompanied by other suspicious symptoms,such as unexplained weight loss,night sweats,fever,and a productive cough often streaked with blood.Isolation for patients with suspected or confirmed TB includes placing the patient on airborne precautions in a single-patient negative-pressure room.In addition to standard precautions,use contact precautions for patients known or suspected to have serious illnesses easily transmitted by direct patient contact or by contact with items in the patient's environment.Examples of such illnesses include gastrointestinal,respiratory,skin,or wound infection and colonization with multidrug-resistant bacteria judged by the infection control program as follows: (1)enteric with a low infectious dose or prolonged environmental survival,including Clostridium difficile,Escherichia coli,Shigella,hepatitis A,or rotavirus; (2)skin infections that are highly contagious or that may occur on dry skin,including diphtheria (cutaneous),herpes simplex virus (neonatal or mucocutaneous),impetigo,major (noncontained)abscesses,cellulitis,decubiti,pediculosis,scabies,staphylococcal furunculosis in infants and young children,or zoster;or (3)viral/hemorrhagic conjunctivitis or viral hemorrhagic infection (Ebola,Lassa,or Marburg).In addition to standard precautions,use droplet precautions for patients known or suspected to have serious illnesses transmitted by large particle droplets.Examples of such illnesses include invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b disease,including meningitis,pneumonia,epiglottitis,and sepsis;and invasive Neisseria meningitidis disease,including meningitis,pneumonia,and sepsis.Other serious bacterial respiratory infections spread by droplet transmission include diphtheria (pharyngeal),Mycoplasma pneumoniae,pertussis,pneumonic plague,streptococcal pharyngitis,pneumonia,and scarlet fever in infants and young children.Serious viral infections spread by droplet transmission include adenovirus,influenza,mumps,parvovirus B19,and rubella.