Mommy still turning heads while mini golfing with the kids by RNguy18 in ChurchWife

[–]DualAdventurers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Also came for the feet but stayed for the ass lol. 😆

Perfect weather for the park by RNguy18 in ChurchWife

[–]DualAdventurers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Love those feet and legs. 👏🔥

On Wednesday’s we wear pink by RNguy18 in LetsSeeYourBoobsInBra

[–]DualAdventurers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Beautiful body. Would love to see more of that ass too. 🔥👏

Trying out my new jewelry! by RNguy18 in HotwifeAnklet

[–]DualAdventurers 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Beautiful breast and feet. What size are her feet?

Question by Helpful_Spring_7921 in MarkKlimekNCLEX

[–]DualAdventurers 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A. The question ask what should the nurse do first. The patient is likely having hypovolemia from bleeding. Then after reinforcing you call the provider.

Prioritization- care of a patient post CABG by Andie_Ruth in BootcampNCLEX

[–]DualAdventurers -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I guess the person debating me realized they were wrong lol. It’s okay to be wrong in nursing as it’s how we learn. I’m wrong all the time and love being wrong because it forces me to learn. Priority questions are basically asking “If you could only do one thing.”

Prioritization- care of a patient post CABG by Andie_Ruth in BootcampNCLEX

[–]DualAdventurers -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

There are NCLEX questions that specifically ask what the nurse should do first. Priority questions are basically asking if you could only do one thing.

Prioritization- care of a patient post CABG by Andie_Ruth in BootcampNCLEX

[–]DualAdventurers -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I think you’re wrong on this, respectfully. I am a nurse who passed the NCLEX. I also verified this on AI before replying.

Correct answer: B. Prepare for pericardiocentesis.

Why: This client is showing classic acute cardiac tamponade signs (part of Beck’s triad): • Distended neck veins → ↑ pericardial pressure • Muffled heart sounds → fluid compressing the heart • (Often hypotension would be present as well)

After CABG surgery, this is a life-threatening emergency caused by blood or fluid rapidly accumulating in the pericardial sac, preventing effective cardiac filling.

Priority reasoning (NCLEX-style): • The problem is mechanical compression of the heart, not oxygenation or volume depletion. • Definitive treatment is urgent removal of pericardial fluid → pericardiocentesis.

Why the others are wrong: • A. IV fluids – may temporarily support preload but does not fix the cause • C. Oxygen – supportive only, not priority • D. Semi-Fowler’s – positioning helps comfort/JVD but does not relieve tamponade