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WHNP·United States·Respiratory
RespiratoryNPUS exam scope

Community-Acquired Pneumonia: Outpatient Judgment

Respiratory (acute)·Focused lesson content with practice questions and exam-style drills linked below.

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Key Concepts

Introduction

Primary-care NP decisions You risk-stratify using integrated clinical picture—vitals, oxygenation, age, comorbidities, pregnancy, frailty, and social determinants—before choosing outpatient antibiotics versus ED referral. Boards punish home antibiotics for patients who need IV fluids, oxygen, or monitoring. Follow-up discipline Specify when to return for worsening dyspnea, new hypoxia, inability to tolerate oral meds, confusion, or hemodynamic instability—vague “call if worse” without time-bound reassessment loses points. Expect next step items: CXR when diagnosis uncertain with high risk, empiric therapy selection when bacterial pneumonia likely, hospital referral when severity tools or clinical picture demand it, and sepsis recognition when hypotension and end-organ dysfunction appear. Traps • Treating viral bronchitis with antibiotics without bacterial pneumonia features. • Ignoring hypoxia or tachypnea in older adults who “look okay.” • Missing pregnancy as a modifier for drug choice and threshold to escalate. For NP certification preparation (United States), questions rarely announce the topic in the first sentence. They hide it inside . Your job is to name the , justify , and select the ...

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vitals, labs, and a short story
clinical problem
why it matters now
safest next step

Pathophysiology / Overview

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Signs and Symptoms

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Client Education

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  • WHNP exam hubOverview, mocks, and hub navigation for this exam track.
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  • Respiratory Acute lesson clusterMore lessons grouped with this topic on the same exam pathway.
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Suggested related lessons

  • Sepsis early recognition→
  • Pneumonia (CAP) nursing priorities→
  • Asthma outpatient management→

Pulled from this lesson’s related-lesson map when authors provide links—additional topic matches appear in “Your next step” below.

Question bank · lesson-linked

WHNP

Practice questions for this topic

Sample stems (up to the current display cap) from the same WHNP pool aligned to this lesson—open any item in the app bank or run a full topic drill.

  1. A 32-year-old female presents to the emergency department with acute onset of right-sided pleuritic chest pain and dyspnoea after a 12-hour international …
  2. A 38-year-old female presents with a 2-week history of progressive shortness of breath, pleuritic chest pain, and a dry cough. She recently returned from …
  3. A 5-year-old boy presents with a fever, cough, and wheezing. His mother reports he has had several respiratory infections in the past year. A chest X-ray …
  4. A 72-year-old nursing home resident presents with fever of 39.1 C, productive cough with purulent sputum, and right lower lobe consolidation on chest X-ra…

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  • Practice this topic (app)Question hub · filtered
    • Sepsis early recognition
    • Pneumonia (CAP) nursing priorities
    • Asthma outpatient management
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