Test bank for pharmacology for nursing care 8th Edition, Richard

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Test bank for pharmacology for nursing care 8th Edition, Richard

 

Chapter 3: Drug Regulation, Development, Names, and Information Test Bank

 

MULTIPLE CHOICE

 

  1. A nurse educator is conducting a continuing education class on pharmacology. To evaluate the learning of the nurses in the class, the nurse educator asks, “Which drug name is a generic drug name?” Which is the correct response?
    1. Acetaminophen
    2. Tylenol
    3. Cipro
    4. Motrin

ANS: A

Acetaminophen is the generic name. Tylenol, Cipro, and Motrin are all trade names.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Comprehension     REF: Table 3-3: The Three Types of Drug Names TOP: Nursing Process: Diagnosis

MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiologic Integrity: Pharmacologic and Parenteral Therapies

 

  1. The FDA Amendments Act (FDAAA) was passed in 2007 to address which aspect of drug safety?
    1. Allowing pharmaceutical companies to identify off-label uses of medications approved for other uses
    2. Evaluating drug safety information that emerges after a drug has been approved and is in use
    3. Expediting the approval process of the S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) so that needed drugs can get to market more quickly
    4. Requiring manufacturers to notify patients before removing a drug from the market

ANS: B

The FDAAA was passed to enable the Food and Drug Administration to continue oversight of a drug after granting it approval so that changes in labeling could be made as necessary and post marketing risks could be tracked and identified. A provision of the FDA Modernization Act (FDAMA), passed in 1997, allows drug companies to promote their products for off-label uses as long as they promise to conduct studies to support their claims. Regulations to permit accelerated approval of drugs for life-threatening diseases were adopted in 1992 by the FDA. The requirement that drugs companies notify patients 6 months before removing a drug from the market is a provision of the FDAMA.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Comprehension     REF: Landmark Drug Legislation TOP: Nursing Process: Evaluation

MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiologic Integrity: Pharmacologic and Parenteral Therapies

 

  1. A nursing student asks a nurse about pharmaceutical research and wants to know the purpose of randomization in drug The nurse explains that randomization is used to:
    1. ensure that differences in outcomes are the result of treatment and not differences in
    2. compare the outcome caused by the treatment to the outcome caused by no

 

 

 

  1. make sure that researchers are unaware of which subjects are in which group.
  2. prevent subjects from knowing which group they are in and prevent preconception

ANS: A

Randomization helps prevent allocation bias, which can occur when researchers place subjects with desired characteristics in the study group and other subjects in the control group so that differences in outcome are actually the result of differences in subjects and not treatment.

Comparing treatment outcome to no treatment outcome is the definition of a controlled study. The last two options describe the use of blinding in studies; blinding ensures that researchers or subjects (or both) are unaware of which subjects are in which group so that preconceptions about benefits and risks cannot bias the results.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Comprehension     REF: The Randomized Drug Trial TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation

MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiologic Integrity: Pharmacologic and Parenteral Therapies

 

  1. Someone asks a nurse about a new drug that is in preclinical testing and wants to know why it cannot be used to treat a friend’s illness. Which statement by the nurse is correct?
    1. “A drug at this stage of development can be used only in patients with serious ”
    2. “At this stage of drug development, the safety and usefulness of the medication is ”
    3. “Clinical trials must be completed to make sure the drug is safe to use in ”
    4. “Until post marketing surveillance data are available, the drug cannot be ”

ANS: B

Preclinical testing must be completed before drugs can be tested in humans. In this stage, drugs are evaluated for toxicities, pharmacokinetic properties, and potentially useful effects. Some drugs can be used in patients before completion of Phase III studies, but this is after preclinical testing is complete. Clinical trials proceed in stages, and each stage has guidelines defining how a new drug may be used and which patients may receive it. Post marketing surveillance takes place after a drug is in general use.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Comprehension

REF: Landmark Drug Legislation | Stages of Drug Development TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation

MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiologic Integrity: Reduction of Risk Potential

 

  1. A patient asks a nurse why drugs that have been approved by the FDA still have unknown side The nurse tell the patient that:
    1. testing for all side effects of a medication would be prohibitively
    2. patients in drug trials often are biased by their preconceptions of a drug’s
    3. researchers tend to conduct studies that will prove the benefits of their new drugs.
    4. subjects in drug trials do not always represent the full spectrum of possible

ANS: D

 

All drug trials are limited by a relatively small group of subjects who may not have all the characteristics of people who will be using the drug; therefore, some side effects go undetected until the drug is in use. Although drug trials are very expensive, this is only an indirect reason they do not detect all side effects before approval. In theory, well-designed drug trials, using blinded studies, minimize or eliminate subject bias. Designing studies to prove desired results is unethical.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Analysis               REF: Failure to Detect All Adverse Effects TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation

MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiologic Integrity: Pharmacologic and Parenteral Therapies

 

  1. A nurse is teaching nursing students about the use of nonproprietary names for The nurse tells them which fact about nonproprietary names?
    1. They are approved by the FDA and are easy to remember.
    2. They are assigned by the U.S. Adopted Names
    3. They clearly identify the drug’s pharmacological
    4. They imply the efficacy of the drug and are less

ANS: B

Nonproprietary, or generic, names are assigned by the U.S. Adopted Names Council, which ensures that each drug has only one name. Trade names, or brand names, are approved by the FDA and are easier to remember. Some nonproprietary names contain syllables that identify the classification, although not all do. Drug names are not supposed to identify the use for the drug, although some brand names do so.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Comprehension     REF: Drug Names: The Three Types of Drug Names TOP: Nursing Process: Diagnosis

MSC: NCLEX Client Needs Category: Physiologic Integrity: Reduction of Risk Potential

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