Key Concepts
Overview and learning objectives
Therapeutic Communication Fundamentals for RPN Practice belongs in RPN preparation because practical nurses frequently notice the first change in a patient's condition, reinforce the plan of care, and escalate concerns before preventable harm occurs. Learning objectives: explain the normal anatomy or physiology connected to therapeutic communication fundamentals; identify common causes and expected findings; perform a focused nursing assessment; choose safe RPN interventions and reporting language; and teach the patient or family what to monitor after discharge. In REx-PN questions, the safest answer links the cue to airway, breathing, circulation, neurologic status, infection risk, medication safety, or functional decline. The RPN does not diagnose independently, but does collect meaningful data, compare trends, implement ordered and delegated care, and communicate clearly when the patient moves outside the expected range. On the exam, writers often pair stable-sounding options with unstable data—notice the mismatch before you commit. If the stem names a license or role, reread that line; scope errors are classic trap answers even when the clinical topic is familiar. Run a 60-second scan: breathing work and oxygenation, perfusion and end organs, neuro...
