Key Concepts
Overview
Which Infection Control Patient Is Unstable? trains NGN-style prioritization for infection scenarios: unstable sepsis, airway compromise with hemoptysis, wrong isolation leaving others exposed, needlestick reporting windows, C. diff outbreaks, or post-op fever with rigidity outrank stable teaching. Pick the client with objective high risk first. Anchor with sepsis early recognition, isolation precautions in practice, PPE & transmission basics, Canada RN hub · US RN hub. Why it matters for nursing care: Which Infection Control Patient Is Unstable? requires early recognition, careful trend assessment, and rapid prioritization when the patient begins to deteriorate. Clinical decisions should connect the underlying pathophysiology to the bedside picture so the nurse can distinguish a stable finding from a red flag that changes urgency, monitoring frequency, and provider communication. Exam relevance: Examiners use first, priority, and most important language. Eliminate answers that delay cultures in stable patients when the stem rewards culture-first discipline, or that delay antibiotics in shock. Watch PPE sequence, room type, and hand hygiene method mismatches. Multi-patient matrices reward one unstable infection client first. On the exam, writers often pair stable-sounding options with...
