In working with a patient which of the following would be the first priority for attention

About 1 out of 10 people may have a seizure during his or her lifetime. That means seizures are common, and one day you might need to help someone during or after a seizure.

Learn what you can do to keep that person safe until the seizure stops by itself.

In working with a patient which of the following would be the first priority for attention

About 1 out of 10 people may have a seizure during his or her lifetime.

Seizures do not usually require emergency medical attention. Only call 911 if one or more of these are true:

  • The person has never had a seizure before.
  • The person has difficulty breathing or waking after the seizure.
  • The seizure lasts longer than 5 minutes.
  • The person has another seizure soon after the first one.
  • The person is hurt during the seizure.
  • The seizure happens in water.
  • The person has a health condition like diabetes, heart disease, or is pregnant.

In working with a patient which of the following would be the first priority for attention

Stay with the person until the seizure ends and he or she is fully awake.

There are many types of seizures. Most seizures end in a few minutes.

These are general steps to help someone who is having any type seizure:

  • Stay with the person until the seizure ends and he or she is fully awake. After it ends, help the person sit in a safe place. Once they are alert and able to communicate, tell them what happened in very simple terms.
  • Comfort the person and speak calmly.
  • Check to see if the person is wearing a medical bracelet or other emergency information.
  • Keep yourself and other people calm.
  • Offer to call a taxi or another person to make sure the person gets home safely.

When most people think of a seizure, they think of a generalized tonic-clonic seizure, also called a grand mal seizure. In this type of seizure, the person may cry out, fall, shake or jerk, and become unaware of what’s going on around them.

Here are things you can do to help someone who is having this type of seizure:

  • Ease the person to the floor.
  • Turn the person gently onto one side. This will help the person breathe.
  • Clear the area around the person of anything hard or sharp. This can prevent injury.
  • Put something soft and flat, like a folded jacket, under his or her head.
  • Remove eyeglasses.
  • Loosen ties or anything around the neck that may make it hard to breathe.
  • Time the seizure. Call 911 if the seizure lasts longer than 5 minutes.

Knowing what NOT to do is important for keeping a person safe during or after a seizure.

In working with a patient which of the following would be the first priority for attention

Never do any of the following things

  • Do not hold the person down or try to stop his or her movements.
  • Do not put anything in the person’s mouth. This can injure teeth or the jaw. A person having a seizure cannot swallow his or her tongue.
  • Do not try to give mouth-to-mouth breaths (like CPR). People usually start breathing again on their own after a seizure.
  • Do not offer the person water or food until he or she is fully alert.

  • American Red Cross First Aid Appexternal iconDownload the free Red Cross app for instant access to step-by-step first aid advice, including advice about seizures and epilepsy.
  • Epilepsy Foundation Seizure First Aid and Safetyexternal iconLearn more about how to respond to seizures safely.
  • Mental Health First Aid Trainingexternal icon  This evidence-based program can help people recognize mental health crises and learn how to connect a person to mental health care.

  • Types of SeizuresLearn about the different types of seizures.
  • Managing Epilepsy Learn what you can do to manage your epilepsy.
  • Fast FactsFind out about epilepsy in the United States, such as how many people have epilepsy.

You will recognize priority questions on the NCLEX-RN® exam because they will ask you what is the “best,” “most important,” “first,” or “initial response” by the nurse.

As you read this question you are probably thinking, “All of these look right!” or “How can I decide what I will do first?” The panic sets in as you try to decide what the best answer is when they all seem “correct.”

As a registered professional nurse, you will be caring for clients who have multiple problems and needs. You must be able to establish priorities by deciding which needs take precedence over the other needs. You probably recognized the baby’s jerky movements as an indication of hypoglycemia. Don’t forget that an important part of the assessment process is validating what you observe. You must complete an assessment before you analyze, plan, and implement nursing care.

The correct answer is (3).

The critical thinking required for priority questions is for you to recognize patterns in the answer choices. By recognizing these patterns, you will know which path you need to choose to correctly answer the question.

There are three strategies to help you establish priorities on the NCLEX-RN® exam:

• Maslow strategy
• Nursing process strategy
• Safety strategy

We will outline each strategy, describe how and when it should be used, and show you how to apply these strategies to exam-style questions. By using these strategies, you will be able to eliminate the second-best answer and correctly identify the highest priority.

Expert Test Tip

Jo Ann Scipio, NCLEX Instructor

“Consider and visualize each question as a clinical situation.”

NCLEX Question Strategy One: Maslow

Maslow’s hierarchy of needs (Figure 1) is crucial to establishing priorities on the NCLEX-RN® exam. Maslow identifies five levels of human needs: physiological, safety or security, love and belonging, esteem, and self-actualization.

In working with a patient which of the following would be the first priority for attention

Because physiological needs are necessary for survival, they have the highest priority and must be met first. Physiological needs include oxygen, fluid, nutrition, temperature, elimination, shelter, rest, and sex. If you don’t have oxygen to breathe or food to eat, you really don’t care if you have stable psychosocial relationships!

Safety and security needs can be both physical and psychosocial. Physical safety includes decreasing what is threatening to the client. The threat may be an illness (myocardial infarction), accidents (a parent transporting a newborn in a car without using a car seat), or environmental threats (the client with COPD who insists on walking outside in 10° F [−12° C] temperatures).

To attain psychological safety, the client must have the knowledge and understanding about what to expect from others in his environment. For example, it is important to teach the client and his family what to expect after a cerebrovascular accident (CVA). It is also important that you allow a woman preparing for a mastectomy to verbalize her concerns about changes that might occur in her relationship with her partner.

To achieve love and belonging, the client needs to feel loved by family and accepted by others. When a client feels self-confident and useful, he will achieve the need of self-esteem as described by Maslow.

The highest level of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs is self-actualization. To achieve this level, the client must experience fulfillment and recognize his or her potential. In order for self-actualization to occur, all of the lower-level needs must be met. Because of the stresses of life, lower-level needs are not always met, and many people never achieve this high level of functioning.

The Maslow Four-Step Process

The first strategy to use in establishing priorities is a four-step process, beginning with Maslow’s hierarchy. To use the Maslow strategy, you must first recognize the pattern in the answer choices.

  • Step 1

    Look at your answer choices. Determine if the answer choices are both physiological and psychosocial. If they are, apply the Maslow strategy detailed in Step 2.

  • Step 2

    Eliminate all psychosocial answer choices. If an answer choice is physiological, don’t eliminate it yet. Remember, Maslow states that physiological needs must be met first. Although pain certainly has a physiological component, reactions to pain are considered “psychosocial” on this exam and will become a lower priority.

  • Step 3

    Look at each of the answer choices that you have not yet eliminated and ask yourself if the answer choice makes sense with regard to the disease or situation described in the question. If it makes sense as an answer choice, keep it for consideration and go on to the next choice.

  • Step 4

    Look at the remaining answer choices. Can you apply the ABCs? The ABCs stand for airway, breathing, and circulation. If there is an answer that involves maintaining a patent airway, it will be correct. If not, is there a choice that involves breathing problems? It will be correct. If not, go on with the ABCs.

    Is there an answer pertaining to the cardiovascular system? It will be correct. What if the ABCs don’t apply? Compare the remaining answer choices and ask yourself, “What is the highest priority?” This is your answer.


In working with a patient which of the following would be the first priority for attention

Use the Maslow Four-Step Process to answer this practice question.

NCLEX Question Strategy Two: Nursing Process (Assessment versus Implementation)

A second strategy that will assist you in establishing priorities involves the assessment and implementation steps of the nursing process. As a nursing student, you have been drilled so that you can recite the steps of the nursing process in your sleep—assessment, analysis, planning, implementation, and evaluation. In nursing school, you did have some test questions about the nursing process, but you probably did not use the nursing process to assist you in selecting a correct answer on an exam.

On the NCLEX-RN® exam, you will be given a clinical situation and asked to establish priorities. The possible answer choices will include both the correct assessment and implementation for this clinical situation. How do you choose the correct answer when both the correct assessment and implementation are given? Think about these two steps of the nursing process.

Assessment is the process of establishing a data profile about the client and his or her health problems. The nurse obtains subjective and objective data in a number of ways: talking to clients, observing clients and/or significant others, taking a health history, performing a physical examination, evaluating lab results, and collaborating with other members of the health care team.

Once you collect the data, you compare it to the client’s baseline or normal values. On the NCLEX-RN® exam, the client’s baseline may not be given, but as a nursing student you have acquired a body of knowledge. On this exam, you are expected to compare the client information you are given to the “normal” values learned from your nursing textbooks.
Assessment is the first step of the nursing process and takes priority over all other steps. It is essential that you complete the assessment phase of the nursing process before you implement nursing activities. This is a common mistake made by NCLEX-RN® exam takers: don’t implement before you assess.

For example, when performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), if you don’t access the airway before performing mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, your actions may be harmful!

Implementation is the care you provide to your clients. Implementation includes: assisting in the performance of activities of daily living (ADLs), counseling and educating the client and the client’s family, giving care to clients, and supervising and evaluating the work of other members of the health team. Nursing interventions may be independent, dependent, or interdependent. Independent interventions are within the scope of nursing practice and do not require supervision by others. Instructing the client to turn, cough, and breathe deeply after surgery is an example of an independent nursing intervention. Dependent interventions are based on the written orders of a physician. On the NCLEX-RN® exam, you should assume that you have an order for all dependent interventions that are included in the answer choices.

This may be a different way of thinking from the way you were taught in nursing school. Many students select an answer on a nursing school test (that is later counted wrong) because the intervention requires a physician’s order. Everyone walks away from the test review muttering, “Trick question.” It is important for you to remember that there are no trick questions on the NCLEXRN® exam. You should base your answer on an understanding that you have a physician’s order for any nursing intervention described.

Interdependent interventions are shared with other members of the health team. For instance, nutrition education may be shared with the dietitian. Chest physiotherapy may be shared with a respiratory therapist.

The following strategy, utilizing the assessment and implementation phases of the nursing process, will assist you in selecting correct answers to questions that ask you to identify priorities.

  • Step 1

    Read the answer choices to establish a pattern. If the answer choices are a mix of assessment/validation and implementation, use the Nursing Process (Assessment vs. Implementation) strategy.

  • Step 2

    Refer to the question to determine whether you should be assessing or implementing.

  • Step 3

    Eliminate answer choices, and then choose the best answer.

    If after Step 2 you find that, for example, it is an assessment question, eliminate any answers that clearly focus on implementation. Then choose the best assessment answer.


In working with a patient which of the following would be the first priority for attention

Use the Nursing Process to answer this practice question.

NCLEX Question Strategy Three: Safety

Nurses have the primary responsibility of ensuring the safety of clients. This includes clients in health care facilities, in the home, at work, and in the community. Safety includes: meeting basic needs (oxygen, food, fluids, etc.), reducing hazards that cause injury to clients (accidents, obstacles in the home), and decreasing the transmission of pathogens (immunizations, sanitation).

Remember that the NCLEX-RN® exam is a test of minimum competency to determine that you are able to practice safe and effective nursing care. Always think safety when selecting correct answers on the exam. When answering questions about procedures, this strategy will help you to establish priorities.

In working with a patient which of the following would be the first priority for attention


  • Step 1

    Are all the answer choices implementations? If so, use the Safety strategy illustrated above.

  • Step 2

    Can you answer the question based on your knowledge? If not, continue to Step 3.

  • Step 3

    Ask yourself, “What will cause the client the least amount of harm?” and choose the best answer.

Apply the saftey strategy above to the following question.

Which of the following actions is most appropriate when a patient is in shock?

If you suspect a person is in shock, call 911 or your local emergency number. Then immediately take the following steps: Lay the person down and elevate the legs and feet slightly, unless you think this may cause pain or further injury. Keep the person still and don't move him or her unless necessary.

Where should the heel of the hand be placed when performing chest compressions during cardiopulmonary resuscitation on an adult quizlet?

Perform chest compression by positioning yourself to one side of the patient and placing the hands properly. The heel of the hand should be along the length of the sternum.

Which of the following may be given to a patient to counteract hypoglycemia?

Try glucose tablets or gel, fruit juice, regular (not diet) soda, honey, or sugary candy. Recheck blood sugar levels 15 minutes after treatment.

What is the correct position to place a patient in after ingestion of a poison?

Do not put your hand into their mouth and do not try to make them sick. While you're waiting for medical help to arrive, lie the person on their side with a cushion behind their back and their upper leg pulled slightly forward, so they do not fall on their face or roll backwards. This is known as the recovery position.