Safety & Emergency Procedures
Fall prevention, fire safety, disaster procedures, and safe use of equipment.
Key Concepts — Part 1
1. Which of the following is the FIRST step a nursing assistant should take upon discovering a fire in a patient's room?
✓ Call for help and alert staff before taking action
Alerting staff and calling for help is the critical first step to ensure proper emergency response and prevent panic. Answer A is wrong because untrained personnel should not attempt to fight fires. Answer C is wrong because evacuation takes priority over containment. Answer D is incorrect because it delays the necessary alert to staff.
2. A patient is at high risk for falls. What should the nursing assistant do to prevent falls in the patient's room?
✓ Place the call bell within the patient's reach and keep the room well-lit
Keeping the call bell accessible and maintaining adequate lighting are evidence-based fall prevention strategies. Answer A is wrong because bed rails can actually increase fall risk and cause injury. Answer C is impractical and restricts necessary mobility. Answer D unnecessarily limits patient activity and dignity.
3. During a tornado warning, where should a nursing assistant move a bedridden patient?
✓ To an interior room on a lower floor, away from windows
Interior rooms on lower floors provide maximum protection from flying debris and structural collapse during tornadoes. Answer B is wrong because exits should be used only if ordered to evacuate. Answer C exposes patients to danger from broken glass. Answer D is extremely dangerous and increases injury risk.
4. A nursing assistant notices a patient's IV line has become loose. What is the MOST appropriate action?
✓ Notify the nurse immediately and do not attempt to adjust it
Only nurses are trained to adjust or troubleshoot IV lines. Immediate notification ensures proper assessment and intervention. Answer A is wrong because CNAs should not manipulate IV equipment. Answer C and D exceed the CNA scope of practice and could cause harm.
5. What does the acronym RACE stand for in fire safety procedures?
✓ Rescue, Alarm, Confine, Extinguish
RACE stands for Rescue (evacuate people), Alarm (activate fire alarm), Confine (close doors to contain fire), and Extinguish (use fire extinguisher if trained and safe). The other answers contain incorrect components of the fire safety protocol.
6. A patient is found on the floor beside the bed. The nursing assistant should do which of the following FIRST?
✓ Check for injuries and call the nurse before moving the patient
Assessment for injuries and nursing evaluation must occur before moving the patient to prevent further harm. Answer A is wrong because moving the patient could worsen injuries. Answer C is premature and ignores potential injuries. Answer D minimizes a serious incident that requires proper documentation and assessment.
7. When using a mechanical lift to transfer a patient, what is a critical safety step?
✓ Ensure the patient is properly secured and the lift is on a stable, flat surface
Proper securing of the patient and stable equipment placement are essential to prevent falls and injuries during transfers. Answer A creates safety hazards from faulty equipment. Answer C is wrong because lifts typically require two people for safety. Answer D prioritizes speed over safety and control.
8. Which type of fire extinguisher should be used for electrical fires?
✓ Type C extinguisher
Type C extinguishers contain non-conductive agents and are specifically designed for electrical fires. Type A is for ordinary combustibles, Type B is for flammable liquids, and Type D is for combustible metals. Using the wrong type on an electrical fire could cause injury or spread the fire.
9. A nursing assistant is helping a patient walk in the hallway. The patient begins to fall. What should the assistant do?
✓ Support the patient's weight, guide them toward a wall, and ease them down gently
Supporting the patient and easing them down safely minimizes injury from the fall. Answer A abandons the patient. Answer C may cause further injury if the patient cannot regain balance. Answer D leaves the patient unsupported and at risk for additional injury.
10. What is the PRIMARY purpose of keeping side rails up on a hospital bed?
✓ To provide a sense of security and prevent falls during sleep or confusion
Side rails provide safety for confused or sleeping patients by preventing accidental falls. Answer A is wrong because side rails should not be used to restrict all movement. Answer C describes physical restraint, which requires separate protocols and orders. Answer D is not the primary purpose of side rails.
Key Concepts — Part 2
1. A nursing assistant spills water on the floor near a patient care area. What should be done IMMEDIATELY?
✓ Wipe up the spill and place a wet floor sign in the area
Cleaning up the spill and warning others with a wet floor sign prevents immediate fall hazards. Answer A leaves a safety risk unaddressed. Answer C postpones necessary immediate action. Answer D delays spill cleanup, increasing fall risk.
2. During a disaster evacuation, a nursing assistant is assigned to transport a patient on a stretcher. In what ORDER should tasks be performed?
✓ Identify the patient, ensure proper securing on stretcher, proceed to designated area, report to staff
Proper identification and securing the patient ensures their safety and prevents loss during evacuation. Answer A risks patient misidentification. Answer C delays evacuation unnecessarily. Answer D endangers the patient through inadequate securing and tracking.
3. What should a nursing assistant do if they observe frayed electrical cords in the patient care area?
✓ Report it to the nurse immediately and do not use the equipment
Damaged electrical cords are fire and shock hazards that must be reported immediately and the equipment must not be used. Answer A creates electrical hazards. Answer C risks fire and injury. Answer D fails to address a known safety hazard.
4. A patient with dementia is attempting to leave the unit without authorization. What is the MOST appropriate action?
✓ Calmly redirect the patient and notify the nurse of the situation
Calm redirection and nurse notification ensures patient safety while maintaining dignity and investigating the cause of the behavior. Answer A uses inappropriate restraint. Answer B ignores safety concerns. Answer D is an extreme measure that violates rights and fire codes.
5. When assisting a patient with a gait belt, where should the nursing assistant position themselves?
✓ At the patient's side, slightly behind, with one hand on the gait belt
Positioning at the side and slightly behind allows the assistant to support, guide, and prevent falls while maintaining awareness of the patient's movements and balance. Answer A provides less control if the patient loses balance. Answer B interferes with the patient's vision. Answer D prevents effective assistance during a fall.
6. What is the appropriate water temperature for patient bathing to prevent burns?
✓ 110°F (43.3°C) or less
Water temperatures should not exceed 110°F (43.3°C) to prevent scalding and burns, especially in elderly or vulnerable patients. Answers A, C, and D use incorrect temperature guidelines that either are too cold or dangerously hot.
7. A nursing assistant finds a patient's oxygen tubing disconnected. What should be done?
✓ Reconnect the tubing immediately and monitor the patient
Simple reconnection of oxygen tubing is within CNA scope and should be done immediately as it is a basic safety measure. The patient should be monitored for distress. Answer B delays necessary care unnecessarily. Answer C leaves the patient without oxygen. Answer D is appropriate after reconnection, but immediate action is priority.
8. Which of the following is the BEST way to prevent patient falls in the bathroom?
✓ Install grab bars, ensure non-slip flooring, and keep the call bell accessible
Grab bars, non-slip surfaces, and accessible call bells are evidence-based environmental modifications that reduce fall risk. Answer A is impractical and restricts necessary function. Answer C unnecessarily limits patient care. Answer D is excessive and may create other hazards.
9. During a hurricane warning, a facility plans evacuation. A nursing assistant should FIRST:
✓ Follow the facility's evacuation plan and report to the assigned staging area
Following the established evacuation plan and reporting to the designated area ensures organized, safe evacuation. Answer A is not a priority during emergency evacuation. Answer C may delay evacuation. Answer D is important but comes after personnel and patient safety in evacuation priority.
10. A patient is being transferred using a mechanical lift and begins to slip from the sling. What should the nursing assistant do?
✓ Call for help and stop the lift until the sling is properly secured
Stopping the lift and getting help ensures the patient is secure before continuing the transfer, preventing falls. Answer A may not be possible safely mid-transfer. Answer B can cause additional slipping or injury. Answer D risks serious fall injury.
Key Concepts — Part 3
1. A nursing assistant discovers a medication spill on the floor. What is the appropriate action?
✓ Notify the nurse immediately and do not clean it yourself
Nurses must handle medication spills due to documentation and disposal requirements. CNAs should not handle medications or their spills. Answer A involves improper medication handling. Answer C violates medication disposal protocols. Answer D delays proper handling of a potential hazard.
2. What should a nursing assistant do if a patient refuses to use a prescribed assistive device like a walker?
✓ Notify the nurse of the patient's refusal and do not force its use
Notifying the nurse ensures the refusal is documented and addressed through proper care planning while respecting patient autonomy. Answer A ignores fall risk. Answer B violates patient rights and may escalate resistance. Answer D creates inconsistency in safety protocols.
3. A nursing assistant observes smoke coming from a patient's room. What is the FIRST action?
✓ Activate the fire alarm and alert staff immediately
Activating the alarm and alerting staff immediately initiates the proper emergency response without delay. Answer A traps you in a potentially dangerous situation. Answer C delays the emergency response. Answer D assumes safety when smoke requires immediate investigation and action.
4. When using a bed transfer board to move a patient from bed to chair, what is essential?
✓ Ensure the bed and chair are locked and at the same height for safe transfer
Locking wheels and matching heights reduce fall risk and back strain during transfer. Answer A increases fall risk. Answer C prioritizes speed over safety. Answer D defeats the purpose of the assistive device.
5. A nursing assistant is assigned to monitor a patient on fall precautions. Which action is MOST important?
✓ Keep the patient's bed in the lowest position with frequent checks
Low bed positioning and frequent monitoring are key fall prevention strategies. Answer A is insufficient frequency for fall precautions. Answer C unnecessarily restricts patient mobility. Answer D prevents patients from calling for help, increasing injury risk.
6. Which of the following is the most important action a CNA should take to prevent falls in a patient's room?
✓ Keep the call bell within the patient's reach
Keeping the call bell within reach allows patients to request assistance before attempting to move, which is a primary fall prevention strategy. The bed should be kept LOW when a patient is at risk for falls. Removing all furniture is unnecessary and impractical. Keeping patients confined to bed increases complications like pressure ulcers and blood clots. The call bell is the correct answer.
7. A patient with a history of falls is wearing a gait belt. What is the correct technique for assisting this patient to walk?
✓ Grip the gait belt firmly on the sides and stay slightly behind and to the side of the patient
The correct technique is to grip the gait belt firmly on the sides and maintain a position slightly behind and to the side of the patient, allowing you to support them if they begin to fall. Holding it loosely defeats its purpose. Following behind without support is unsafe. The gait belt should always be used when indicated—not skipped in favor of arm support alone.
8. When should a CNA place the bed rails up for a patient?
✓ As ordered by the nurse for patients at high risk for falls
Bed rails should be used ONLY as ordered by the nurse for specific patients at high risk for falls or with certain medical conditions. Blanket use of bed rails is not recommended as they can increase fall risk when patients try to climb over them, and they may be considered restraints in some situations. They should not always be up, nor should they never be used—it depends on medical orders.
9. What is the first action a CNA should take upon discovering a patient has fallen?
✓ Do not move the patient and notify the nurse immediately
The correct action is to NOT move the patient and to notify the nurse immediately. The patient may have injuries like fractures or spinal injury that could be worsened by moving. Helping them up without assessment is dangerous. Giving water before evaluation is inappropriate. While documentation is important, it comes AFTER the nurse has assessed the patient and determined they are safe.
10. Which environmental factor is most likely to contribute to patient falls?
✓ Clutter, wet floors, or poor lighting in the patient's room
Clutter, wet floors, and poor lighting create hazardous conditions that significantly increase fall risk. A comfortable room temperature (72°F), availability of a call bell, and a low bed are all safety factors that REDUCE fall risk, not contribute to it.
Key Concepts — Part 4
1. A patient is at high risk for falls due to medications that cause dizziness. What should the CNA do?
✓ Tell the patient to move slowly and use handrails or support
The CNA should educate and assist the patient by advising them to move slowly and use support such as handrails or the CNA's assistance. The CNA cannot recommend stopping medications—that's the nurse/doctor's role. Confining the patient to bed causes other complications. Extra caffeine is not appropriate and doesn't address the underlying dizziness issue.
2. What is the proper response when a CNA discovers a small fire in a wastebasket in a patient's room?
✓ Immediately evacuate the patient and alert staff; use a fire extinguisher only if trained and the fire is small and contained
The correct response is to evacuate the patient first, alert staff, and only use a fire extinguisher if trained and the fire is small and manageable. Never ignore a fire. Using water on certain fires (electrical, chemical) can be dangerous—the type of extinguisher depends on the fire type (PASS protocol). Closing the door traps the patient with the fire; evacuation is priority.
3. What does the acronym PASS stand for when using a fire extinguisher?
✓ Pull, Aim, Squeeze, Sweep
PASS stands for Pull (the pin), Aim (at the base of the fire), Squeeze (the handle), and Sweep (side to side). This is the universally recognized technique for fire extinguisher use. The other options use incorrect terminology that does not represent standard fire safety protocols.
4. During a facility-wide evacuation due to a fire, where should a CNA take an ambulatory patient?
✓ To the nearest exit and then to the designated assembly area
During evacuation, the CNA should proceed to the nearest exit and then move to the designated assembly area as instructed in the facility's fire plan. Patient safety is the priority—not gathering belongings. The designated assembly area, not the cafeteria or parking lot randomly, is where staff account for all patients and receive further instructions.
5. What is the correct order for evacuation during a fire in a healthcare facility?
✓ Patients nearest the fire first, then move outward, then staff leaves last
The correct evacuation order is based on proximity to danger: patients nearest the fire are evacuated first, then move outward in a controlled pattern, and staff leaves last after ensuring all patients have been evacuated. This minimizes risk to the most vulnerable. The other options do not prioritize based on immediate danger or leave staff present to assist patients.
6. Which type of fire extinguisher is appropriate for electrical fires?
✓ Type C (dry chemical or CO2)
Type C fire extinguishers are appropriate for electrical fires because they do not conduct electricity. Type A is for ordinary combustibles, Type B is for flammable liquids, and Type D is for metal fires. Using water-based or foam extinguishers on electrical fires is dangerous and can cause electrocution.
7. What should a CNA do if a patient is having a seizure?
✓ Clear the area of hazards, position the patient on their side, and notify the nurse
The correct action is to clear the area of hazards, position the patient on their side (to prevent aspiration), and notify the nurse immediately. Never place anything in the mouth—this can cause injury. Do NOT hold the patient down; allow the seizure to occur naturally. Do NOT give food or water during or immediately after a seizure due to aspiration risk.
8. A patient is choking and cannot speak or cough. What is the CNA's appropriate action?
✓ Perform the Heimlich maneuver (abdominal thrusts) and call for help
When a patient cannot speak or cough (complete airway obstruction), the CNA should perform abdominal thrusts (Heimlich maneuver) and call for help immediately. A patient who cannot speak is in severe distress. Waiting or encouraging coughing wastes critical time. Water is contraindicated when the airway is obstructed.
9. What is the primary purpose of a fire drill in a healthcare facility?
✓ To ensure all staff and patients know evacuation procedures and can execute them efficiently
The primary purpose of fire drills is to ensure that all staff and patients understand evacuation procedures and can execute them quickly and safely in a real emergency. Drills are serious safety exercises. Testing alarm systems is secondary. Drills are not for entertainment. Moving patients between units is not the focus of fire safety drills.
10. When should a CNA report a potential safety hazard in the facility?
✓ Immediately to the nurse or supervisor
Safety hazards should be reported immediately to the nurse or supervisor to prevent patient injury before it occurs. Waiting until the end of shift or until someone is injured defeats the purpose of hazard reporting. The CNA should report ALL hazards, not just those deemed 'very serious,' because severity can be subjective and prevention is always the goal.
Key Concepts — Part 5
1. A tornado warning has been issued for the facility's area. What should a CNA do?
✓ Move patients away from windows to interior hallways or rooms without windows as directed
During a tornado warning, patients should be moved to interior rooms or hallways away from windows and exterior walls, following the facility's disaster plan. Tornado warnings are serious and require action. Going outside increases risk of injury. Locking doors does not protect against tornadoes. Following the facility's established protocol is essential.
2. Which action best demonstrates proper body mechanics when assisting a patient to transfer from bed to a wheelchair?
✓ Keep your back straight, bend at the knees, and keep the patient close to your body
Proper body mechanics include keeping the back straight, bending at the knees, and keeping the patient close to your body to reduce strain on the back. Bending at the waist with straight legs is incorrect and causes back injury. Relying solely on arm strength is unsafe. While patient participation is good, the CNA must provide appropriate assistance using proper technique.
3. What should a CNA check before using any patient care equipment?
✓ Check for damage, proper function, and safety features; report any problems to the nurse
CNAs should ALWAYS check equipment for damage, proper function, and safety before use and report any problems to the nurse immediately. Equipment should not be used if damage is suspected. Waiting for patient complaints or assuming equipment is safe based on appearance is dangerous. Regular equipment checks are a critical safety responsibility.
4. A patient is wearing an oxygen mask. What precaution should the CNA take?
✓ Keep away from open flames, smoking materials, and sources of heat
Oxygen is highly flammable. When a patient is using oxygen, the CNA must keep away from open flames, smoking materials, and sources of heat to prevent fire. Do not remove the mask without orders—this is the nurse's responsibility. Do not adjust oxygen flow—this is also the nurse's responsibility. Oxygen safety is a critical responsibility.
5. What is the proper way to respond if a patient refuses to use a safety device like a gait belt or grab bar?
✓ Explain the reason for the safety measure, encourage use, and notify the nurse if the patient continues to refuse
When a patient refuses a safety device, the CNA should explain the reason for it, encourage its use, and notify the nurse about the refusal. Patients have the right to refuse, but they deserve education about risks. Forcing use violates patient autonomy and rights. Threatening discharge is inappropriate and ineffective. The nurse must be informed to document and explore reasons for refusal.
6. During a flood emergency, how should non-ambulatory patients be evacuated from a lower floor?
✓ Follow the facility's evacuation plan, moving them to higher floors using available equipment
Patients should be evacuated to higher floors following the facility's disaster plan using appropriate equipment and assistance. Leaving them in rooms is abandonment. Pushing through floodwater is dangerous—the current can be strong. Waiting for water to drain risks patient safety and may delay critical evacuation. The facility's established protocol must be followed.
7. What is the correct action if a CNA observes a fire in the facility?
✓ Sound the alarm, notify staff, evacuate the area, and never use an elevator
The correct action is to sound the alarm, notify staff immediately, and evacuate the area. Never use elevators during fire emergencies—use stairs. Assuming someone else has called is dangerous. Waiting for confirmation wastes time. Attempting to fight a fire alone, especially without training, is unsafe. Immediate action and communication are essential.
8. A patient with dementia is at high risk for falls. What strategy should the CNA use?
✓ Keep the environment calm, well-lit, and free of hazards; supervise closely; use assistive devices as ordered
For patients with dementia at risk for falls, the CNA should maintain a safe environment (calm, well-lit, hazard-free), provide close supervision, and use assistive devices as ordered. Restraints are not appropriate and increase fall risk. Limiting all activities causes complications like deconditioning. Unsupervised wandering is dangerous. A balanced approach with supervision and environmental modification is correct.
9. What should a CNA do if a patient reports pain while using a mechanical lift?
✓ Stop the procedure, position the patient for comfort, and notify the nurse
If a patient reports pain during a lift, the CNA should STOP immediately, reposition the patient for comfort, and notify the nurse. Pain may indicate injury, improper positioning, or equipment malfunction. Continuing is dangerous. Increasing speed makes it worse. Manual lifting without addressing the pain is not a solution. Patient comfort and safety must be prioritized.
10. Which of the following is a sign that a patient may fall soon?
✓ The patient appears unsteady, confused, or is reaching for items out of reach
Signs of fall risk include unsteadiness, confusion, and reaching for items out of reach, which indicate the patient may attempt to move without assistance. Frequent call bell use actually shows the patient is appropriately seeking help. Sound sleep, good appetite, and weight gain are positive signs. Recognizing early warning signs allows the CNA to provide preventive assistance.