 Welcome to Nursing School Explained and this review, an example of this Q&A review for NCLEX RN by FA Davis. You probably know that I'm a big fan of FA Davis products because they work well and they reflect the latest NCLEX test plan. They give you alternate format questions and they give you the rationales for correct and incorrect answer so that you know why the correct answer is right and why the incorrect answer is wrong. So let's take a look at an example here. So we are here in the basic care and comfort chapter and we're gonna go over question 548. So it says, the nurses inserting a urinary catheter in the client with urinary retention during balloon inflation, the client reports pain. What is the nurses best action? Number one, withdraw a stir of water from the balloon and advance to catheter further. Continue inflating the balloon as this finding is expected during catheter insertion. Remove the catheter and reattempt insertion with a smaller urinary catheter or reposition the catheter by rotating it slightly and continue to inflate the balloon. Now just think about what a catheter looks like where that balloon is located because you know that during balloon inflation you have a problem because the patient says there's pain. So what's the best action? Let's look at our answers here. 548, so over here. So here our answer is number one. The pain may be from the balloon being inflated in the urethra rather than the bladder which is not where it belongs. Empty in the balloon and advancing the catheter will allow the catheter to enter the bladder. That sounds like a pretty good explanation to me. Then pain during balloon inflation is abnormal. Continuing to inflate the balloon could damage the urethra because now you're blowing it up in the urethra in a small tube rather than the bladder, the big cavity that we wanna get into. Number three, the catheter should be removed if an attempt to advance the catheter fails. The size of the catheter does influence the pain experience during the balloon inflation when improperly located. And then number four over here, repositioning a catheter with partially inflated balloon could damage the urethra and cause more pain for the client. And then here we have a test taking tip that says note the words best action in the question. Three options are similar with keeping the balloon partially inflated and the other is different. So this is what you're gonna be looking at in these questions here and in the rationales. You're always gonna get a test taking tip and you're gonna get the explanations for the rationales for the correct and incorrect answers. Remember with a coupon code Petra20, you always get 20% off plus free shipping in the US from any FADVIS products. So I highly recommend this book as well as this other one, Prioritization and Clinical Judgment for NCLEX-RN because this one also has clinical case studies which we will encounter on the next gen NCLEX. Thanks for watching, good luck in your studies. You got this.