Nursing (NCLEX)

Management of Care Reviewer for NCLEX-RN 2026 (Complete Guide for Filipino Nurses)

LisensyaPrep TeamMay 31, 202613 min read

Management of Care is the single largest category on the NCLEX-RN, comprising 15-21% of the entire exam. For Filipino nurses, this category is often the most challenging because US delegation rules, patient advocacy concepts, and legal frameworks differ significantly from Philippine nursing practice.

This reviewer covers every Management of Care topic tested on the 2026 NCLEX-RN with US-specific frameworks Filipino nurses must master.


Why Management of Care Trips Up Filipino Nurses

Filipino nurses often struggle with this category for three specific reasons:

1. Different delegation structure. In the Philippines, RNs often perform tasks that US LPNs and UAPs do. The US has strict scope-of-practice rules.

2. Legal framework differences. US laws around informed consent, HIPAA, advance directives, and patient rights are tested heavily and differ from Philippine laws.

3. Cultural differences in care. US healthcare emphasizes patient autonomy more than Philippine collectivist culture. Tested concepts like client refusal of treatment and self-determination can feel counterintuitive.

Mastering these differences is essential for passing the NCLEX.


Topic 1: Establishing Priorities (Most Heavily Tested)

Approximately 30-40% of Management of Care questions involve prioritization.

You will see questions asking:

  • "Which client should the nurse assess first?"
  • "What is the priority nursing intervention?"
  • "Which task should the nurse complete first?"

The Four Prioritization Frameworks

Master these frameworks and apply them in order.

Framework 1: ABCs (Airway, Breathing, Circulation)

Always check for life-threatening issues first:

  • Airway problems = highest priority — Stridor, gurgling, choking, complete obstruction
  • Breathing problems = second priority — Severe dyspnea, respiratory failure, low SpO2, bradypnea
  • Circulation problems = third priority — Active bleeding, shock, severe hypotension, cardiac arrest

Application: A client with stridor takes priority over a client with chest pain. A client with chest pain takes priority over a client with severe pain.

Framework 2: Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs

When ABCs are not at issue, apply Maslow's:

  • Physiological needs (highest) — Food, water, oxygen, elimination, sleep, pain relief
  • Safety needs — Physical and emotional safety
  • Love and belonging — Relationships, support
  • Esteem — Self-respect, recognition
  • Self-actualization (lowest) — Personal growth

Application: A client requesting pain medication takes priority over a client wanting to talk about feelings (physiological before emotional).

Framework 3: Stability and Acuity

More unstable = higher priority:

  • Unstable patients before stable
  • Acute conditions before chronic
  • New onset symptoms before known/chronic symptoms
  • Deteriorating patients before improving patients

Application: A new admission with chest pain takes priority over a known cardiac patient with stable angina.

Framework 4: Predictable vs Unpredictable

When time is limited:

  • Unpredictable outcomes take priority
  • Concerning vital sign changes over expected ones
  • Unfamiliar symptoms over expected post-op pain

Common Priority Question Patterns

Pattern 1: Choose the most unstable client

"The nurse is starting shift. Which client should be assessed first?"

  • Client awaiting discharge — Lowest priority
  • Client with stable post-op pain — Low priority
  • Client with new-onset confusion — HIGHEST PRIORITY
  • Client requesting pain medication — Medium priority

The new-onset confusion suggests possible stroke, hypoglycemia, or other emergency.

Pattern 2: Choose the most dangerous symptom

"Which finding requires the nurse's immediate attention?"

  • Mild headache — Low priority
  • Cool, pale skin and tachycardia — HIGHEST PRIORITY (possible shock)
  • Mild incisional pain — Low priority
  • Slightly elevated temperature — Low priority

Pattern 3: ABCs trumps everything

"Four clients call for assistance. Which should the nurse see first?"

  • Client needing to use the restroom — Low priority
  • Client requesting pain medication — Medium priority
  • Client with sudden difficulty breathing — HIGHEST PRIORITY (airway)
  • Client wanting to talk to family — Lowest priority

Topic 2: Delegation (Critical for US Practice)

Approximately 20-25% of Management of Care questions test delegation.

This is where Filipino nurses must completely relearn US nursing practice.

The Five Rights of Delegation

The nurse must verify:

  • Right Task — Is this task within the delegatee's scope?
  • Right Circumstance — Is the patient stable enough?
  • Right Person — Is this person qualified?
  • Right Direction — Have I given clear instructions?
  • Right Supervision — Will I monitor and evaluate?

Scope of Practice Reference Chart

TaskRNLPN/LVNUAP

|------|----|---------|----|

Initial assessmentYesNoNo
Establish nursing diagnosisYesNoNo
Develop care planYesNoNo
Initial patient teachingYesNoNo
Reinforce teachingYesYesNo
Evaluate care outcomesYesNoNo
Administer PO medicationsYesYesNo
Administer IV pushYesNo*No
Insert urinary catheterYesYesNo
Insert NG tubeYesYesNo
Wound care (sterile)YesYes**No
Vital signs (stable)YesYesYes
Vital signs (unstable)YesNoNo
ADLs (bath, feeding)YesYesYes
Specimen collectionYesYesYes
I&O recordingYesYesYes
Blood transfusion initiationYesNoNo
Care of unstable patientYesNoNo

*Most states; some allow with additional certification

**Routine wound care; complex wound care RN only

Memorize: What UAPs CANNOT Do

UAPs (also called CNAs, PCAs, NAs in different settings) cannot perform:

  • Any assessment (even though they take vital signs)
  • Any teaching
  • Any medication administration
  • Sterile procedures
  • Care planning
  • Care of unstable patients
  • Tasks requiring nursing judgment

Common UAP tasks (delegate-friendly):

  • Bathing, dressing, feeding
  • Ambulating stable patients
  • Routine vital signs
  • I&O recording
  • Toileting assistance
  • Bed-making
  • Simple comfort measures (positioning, repositioning)

Memorize: LPN/LVN Limitations

LPNs/LVNs work under RN supervision and cannot:

  • Perform initial assessment
  • Develop care plans
  • Provide initial teaching
  • Care for unstable patients
  • Administer IV push medications (most states)
  • Initiate blood transfusions
  • Triage in emergency departments

LPN/LVN can:

  • Administer most oral and IM medications
  • Reinforce teaching already done by RN
  • Care for stable patients
  • Insert urinary catheters and NG tubes
  • Routine wound care
  • Monitor stable IV fluids (no push medications)

Delegation Question Patterns

Pattern 1: Wrong task delegated to UAP

"The RN is delegating tasks. Which is INAPPROPRIATE to delegate to the UAP?"

Look for: Assessment, teaching, medications, sterile procedures, care of unstable patients.

Example: "Initial assessment of newly admitted client" should NOT be delegated to UAP (assessment is RN only).

Pattern 2: Choose what CAN be delegated

"Which task is appropriate to delegate to the UAP?"

Look for: ADLs, vital signs on stable patients, I&O, ambulating stable patients.

Example: "Taking routine vital signs on a stable post-operative client" CAN be delegated to UAP.

Pattern 3: LPN vs RN responsibilities

"Which client should the charge nurse assign to the LPN/LVN rather than the RN?"

LPNs get stable, predictable patients. RNs get unstable, complex patients.


Topic 3: Advocacy and Ethical Practice

The NCLEX heavily tests patient advocacy and ethical decision-making.

The Six Ethical Principles

1. Autonomy — Patient's right to self-determination

  • Includes right to refuse treatment, even life-saving treatment
  • Right to information needed for informed decisions

2. Beneficence — Doing good for the patient

3. Nonmaleficence — "Do no harm"

4. Justice — Fairness in care delivery

5. Fidelity — Keeping promises and commitments

6. Veracity — Telling the truth

Common Advocacy Scenarios

Scenario 1: Client refuses treatment

A competent adult has the right to refuse any treatment, even if it will cause death. The nurse:

  • Acknowledges the right to refuse
  • Educates about consequences
  • Documents the refusal
  • Does NOT force treatment

Scenario 2: Family disagrees with client's wishes

Honor the competent client's decision over the family's wishes. The client's autonomy comes first.

Scenario 3: Questionable medication order

The nurse advocates by questioning unclear, inappropriate, or unsafe orders. Document and notify the prescriber. NEVER administer a medication you suspect is incorrect.

Scenario 4: Inadequate pain management

The nurse advocates for adequate pain control, even if other providers minimize the client's pain.

Cultural Awareness Principles

The NCLEX tests cultural competence:

  • Respect cultural differences in pain expression, eye contact, decision-making
  • Use professional interpreters (not family members)
  • Avoid stereotyping based on culture
  • Ask the client about their preferences rather than assuming

Example tested concept: A client refuses a male physician for religious reasons. The nurse advocates by arranging a female provider, not by arguing or pressuring the client.


Topic 4: Informed Consent

Informed consent is required for procedures, surgeries, blood transfusions, and research.

Components of Informed Consent

A valid informed consent requires:

1. Disclosure — Information about the procedure

  • Nature of the procedure
  • Risks and benefits
  • Alternatives
  • Consequences of refusal

2. Comprehension — Client understands the information

3. Voluntariness — Decision made without coercion

4. Competence — Client is capable of decision-making

5. Signed consent form — Documentation of agreement

The Nurse's Role in Informed Consent

The NURSE does NOT:

  • Explain the procedure (that is the provider's job)
  • Obtain consent
  • Determine competence

The NURSE DOES:

  • Witness the signature
  • Verify the client understands (if not, contact provider to re-explain)
  • Document
  • Advocate if the client appears confused or coerced

Special Consent Situations

Minors: Parent or guardian must consent (exceptions: emancipated minors, emergency situations, certain reproductive/mental health services in many states)

Adults with cognitive impairment: Legal guardian or healthcare proxy consents

Emergency situations: Implied consent allows life-saving treatment when consent cannot be obtained

Refusal: Client can refuse at any time, even after signing


Topic 5: Confidentiality and HIPAA

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) protects patient health information.

What HIPAA Covers

Protected Health Information (PHI) includes:

  • Patient name
  • Address
  • Birth date
  • Social Security number
  • Medical record number
  • Diagnosis and treatment
  • Photos
  • Any information that can identify the patient

Allowed PHI Disclosure

PHI can be shared with:

  • Healthcare team directly involved in the patient's care
  • Insurance companies for billing
  • Public health authorities (mandated reporting)
  • Legal authorities (subpoenas, warrants)
  • The patient's designated representatives

HIPAA Violations to Avoid

  • Discussing patient in public elevators or hallways
  • Posting about patients on social media (even without names)
  • Sharing PHI with family without patient consent
  • Looking up records of patients you are not caring for
  • Leaving computer logged in with PHI visible
  • Discussing celebrity patients with coworkers not involved in their care

Special Privacy Situations

Mandated reporting (overrides confidentiality):

  • Suspected child abuse
  • Suspected elder abuse
  • Certain communicable diseases (TB, STIs in some states)
  • Gunshot wounds
  • Suspected criminal activity (limited)

Topic 6: Legal Concepts

The NCLEX tests fundamental legal concepts.

Types of Torts

Unintentional Torts:

  • Negligence — Failure to provide reasonable care, causing harm
  • Malpractice — Professional negligence

Intentional Torts:

  • Assault — Threatening harm
  • Battery — Touching without consent
  • False Imprisonment — Improper restraint
  • Defamation (libel/slander)
  • Invasion of Privacy
  • Fraud

Common Legal Issues

Restraints (False Imprisonment Risk):

  • Require provider order (renewed per protocol)
  • Used only after less restrictive measures fail
  • Monitor every 2 hours minimum
  • Document need, type, monitoring
  • Time-limited orders

Documentation Standards:

Good documentation is:

  • Factual, objective
  • Timely (as close to event as possible)
  • Complete
  • Clear and legible
  • Includes assessment, interventions, response
  • No erasures (single line through errors)

Avoid:

  • Subjective opinions
  • Blame statements
  • Vague terms ("appears well")
  • Late entries without proper labeling
  • Documentation in another nurse's name

Topic 7: Advance Directives

Advance directives allow patients to control their care if they become incapacitated.

Types of Advance Directives

1. Living Will

Written document specifying treatments wanted/not wanted. Activated when patient cannot communicate. May include DNR, life support preferences.

2. Durable Power of Attorney for Healthcare

Designates a person to make healthcare decisions. Surrogate decision-maker. Different from financial POA.

3. DNR (Do Not Resuscitate) Order

Specific order from physician. Indicates no CPR if cardiac arrest. Must be reviewed regularly.

Nurse's Role with Advance Directives

  • Verify directives are in the chart
  • Honor the patient's documented wishes
  • Educate patients about advance directive options
  • Advocate when family disagrees with patient's wishes
  • Notify the healthcare team about advance directives

Common Management of Care Question Examples

Example 1: Priority Assessment

Question: A nurse is starting shift on a medical floor. Four clients require assessment. Which client should the nurse assess first?

A. A client requesting discharge instructions

B. A client with pain rated 7/10 awaiting next pain medication dose

C. A client with new-onset shortness of breath and SpO2 of 88%

D. A client with stable post-operative incision

Answer: C — New-onset shortness of breath with hypoxia indicates respiratory compromise (Airway/Breathing priority). Use ABC framework.

Example 2: Delegation

Question: Which task is most appropriate for the RN to delegate to the unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP)?

A. Initial assessment of a newly admitted client

B. Teaching a client about insulin administration

C. Taking routine vital signs on a stable client

D. Administering medication to a stable client

Answer: C — UAPs can take routine vital signs on stable clients. Initial assessments, teaching, and medication administration are NOT in UAP scope.

Example 3: Informed Consent

Question: Before a surgical procedure, the nurse identifies that the client does not understand the procedure. What is the nurse's most appropriate action?

A. Explain the procedure to the client

B. Have the client's family explain

C. Notify the surgeon to discuss the procedure with the client

D. Document the refusal and proceed with surgery prep

Answer: C — The surgeon must obtain informed consent. The nurse advocates by ensuring the surgeon re-explains until the client understands.

Example 4: HIPAA

Question: Which situation represents a HIPAA violation?

A. Discussing patient care with the assigned nursing team in a private conference room

B. Reviewing lab results with the provider managing the patient's care

C. Discussing a celebrity patient's diagnosis with a coworker not involved in their care

D. Sharing patient information during formal nursing handoff report

Answer: C — HIPAA permits sharing PHI only with those directly involved in the patient's care.

Example 5: Advance Directive Conflict

Question: A client with a do-not-resuscitate (DNR) order experiences cardiac arrest. The family insists on CPR. What is the nurse's appropriate action?

A. Begin CPR immediately

B. Wait for the family to decide

C. Honor the DNR order

D. Call the provider for permission

Answer: C — Valid DNR orders must be honored regardless of family requests. The client's documented wishes take precedence over family preferences.


Practice Strategy for Management of Care

Daily target: 30 to 40 Management of Care questions per day.

Focus areas in order of priority:

  • Prioritization questions (largest portion)
  • Delegation scenarios
  • HIPAA and confidentiality
  • Informed consent
  • Advance directives and ethical principles

Build flashcards for:

  • Scope of practice (RN, LPN, UAP)
  • Common priority frameworks (ABCs, Maslow)
  • HIPAA dos and don'ts
  • Types of torts
  • Components of informed consent

Common Mistakes Filipino Nurses Make

Mistake 1: Using Philippine delegation rules

In the Philippines, RNs often perform tasks that US LPNs or UAPs do. Learn US scope strictly.

Mistake 2: Choosing the "most caring" answer

The most caring answer is not always correct. The NCLEX wants the safest, most professional action.

Mistake 3: Honoring family wishes over patient wishes

Filipino culture values family input. US healthcare prioritizes individual patient autonomy.

Mistake 4: Skipping the "first action" word

"First" means immediate priority. "Best" means most appropriate when multiple options work. Read carefully.

Mistake 5: Memorizing without understanding

Management of Care requires applying frameworks, not memorizing answers. Practice many scenarios.


Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Management of Care so heavily tested?

At 15-21% of the exam, Management of Care reflects the nurse's central role in coordinating safe care delivery, especially in US healthcare's complex system with multiple delegation levels.

How is delegation different in the US versus the Philippines?

US delegation follows strict scope-of-practice laws by license level (RN, LPN, UAP). Philippine practice often has less formal delegation structures, with RNs performing many tasks.

Do I need to memorize all the scope-of-practice rules?

Yes, especially the differences between RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP scope. This is heavily tested.

Can I refuse to delegate a task if I am uncomfortable?

Yes. The delegating nurse retains accountability. If you do not trust the delegatee to safely perform a task, do not delegate it.

What if a family member is acting as the patient's interpreter?

Use a professional medical interpreter whenever possible. Family interpreters can introduce errors, bias, and HIPAA concerns. The Joint Commission requires certified interpreters for clinical encounters.


Practice Management of Care Questions at LisensyaPrep

LisensyaPrep's NCLEX Quiz Module 2 contains 50 practice questions specifically on Management of Care, with detailed rationales matching NCLEX-style questions.

Start Module 2: Management of Care Practice


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