Updated: Mar 20, 2020 Published Nov 13, 2011
lookup
13 Posts
Please help . I will take the NCLEX soon and I have come across some conflicting information. The Kaplan question below indicates that with late decelerations during labor, the first thing we should do is shut off the pitocin. However the Kaplan book as well as other web resources, including this thread at AllNurses (https://allnurses.com/general-nursing-student/late-decelerations-uteroplacental-590015-page2.html), indicates that the order of interventions should be :
Kaplan Question:
What will the NCLEX test expect? Thank you. ?
xtxrn, ASN, RN
4,267 Posts
Try this-
What is the risk to the baby w/late decels?
A-B-C s
Jolie, BSN
6,375 Posts
I hate these artificial questions, because, in reality, you CAN turn off the pit as you assist the patient to her L side, and reach up and start the O2 at the same time.
But, if forced to choose, I would turn off the pit first. While it has a very short 1/2 life, it won't begin to clear the mother's blood stream until it has been turned off for a minute or 2. The other interventions will have immediate effect.
I have a problem with the "correct answer" stating that discontinuing the pit is the LAST step you would take with the patient.
truckinusa, BSN, LPN, RN
365 Posts
ATI says the same thing. Discontinue IV medication
A nurse who is caring for a client in labor. The client is receiving a oxytocin(pitocin) by continuous IV infusion, piggybacked into a maintenance IV solution. The external FHR monitor indicates late deccerations. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?
fem
236 Posts
Hi.
I'm studying the same topic. Per ATI's book = RN Maternal Newborn Nursing Edition 8.0, p173, it states the initial Nursing Action
is to "reposition the client in to Left Lateral Position". The ATI non-proctored test says the next step is to D/C the oxytocin (Pitocin).
I'm so frustrated when the professor tells you one thing and the ATI exam tells you something else.
If you don't pass the Professor's exams, you never even get to to take the NCLEX.
But seems like what Professor's teach should be consistent with NCLEX questions.
Ok, rant over. LOL.
Wildcats.Cabral
11 Posts
I had the same conflict in an exam last week. As previous poster stated, we have to pass professor's exam right now, so go with their answer, which was O2, reposition, Pitocin, etc. Other study guides were similar to other information stated, IV, reposition, O2.
suppaduppaCNA
43 Posts
Discontinue IV first because baby at greater risk for uteroplacental insufficiency if uterine contraction continue. (Source:ATI).
Now If I have an issue like yours I will ask the instructor what's his/her rationale because I want to learn the right way.(if there is one...)
It is frustrating when the same source (ATI) states 2 different approaches to implementation.
And yes, I've observed this type of conflict even in the same textbook & edition.... Just a different page.
When I've pointed this out to 2 or 3 different instructors, I'm told "don't worry about it".
Best advice one instructor gave me was "When in Rome, do as the Romans do; Each hospital has policy & protocols".
LiveFit99
48 Posts
Sorry to post such an old thread but I just had this on ATI. Echoing my frustration with this "first intervention" questions. Truth is you would do them all in a span of about 15 seconds so the point is rather moot. Also, I did some specific FHR training and the intervention was almost always to reposition first.
While I understand "follow hospital policy" that doesn't help us get poor questions correct that affect our GPA.
decandjl
2 Posts
I hate to bring up an old topic, but I did want to reply to your post LiveFit99. This is what I'm getting from my text book:
Thanks for input. Luckily I already passed nclex!
I understand rationale to stop pitocin but still find sources saying reposition first too.
For one, my class was taught that least invasive intervention is preferred, and reposition would be less invasive than changing medication.
However I now no longer care because the real answer is I will do what I'm taught at the hospital. Suck it ATI and NCLEX with your silly questions!