ActivityIntroduction
Module 2 Activity

Test Your Knowledge

You have read about your environment. Now put what you learned into practice with real hospital scenarios.

💡
This is not a test
There is no pass or fail. This activity helps you think through real situations you may face during your stay.
🛏️
Room Scenarios
What would you do in these real situations?
🔍
Myth or Fact
Sort common beliefs about your environment
📋
Safety Check
Spot the safety problems in a room
🌙
Night-Time Scenarios
Practice the safest response at night

10 questions across 4 rounds — about 5 minutes

Round 1 of 4Room Scenarios
🛏️
Round 1
Room Scenarios

Read each scenario and choose the best response. There is one best answer for each.

📍 Scenario 1 of 3
You sit on the edge of your bed and your feet dangle above the floor. You cannot reach the ground comfortably. What should you do?
Round 2 of 4Myth or Fact
🔍
Round 2
Myth or Fact?

For each statement, decide if it is a myth or a fact.

Round 3 of 4Safety Check
📋
Round 3
Spot the Safety Problems
📍 Patient Room
Look at David's room setup. David has just been admitted. His bed is set high — his feet do not reach the floor. His overnight bag is on the floor beside the bed. The bathroom light is off. There is a water spill near the sink. His call button is clipped to the wall behind him.

Which of these are safety problems? Select all that apply.

Round 4 of 4Night-Time Scenarios
🌙
Round 4
After Dark

Most hospital falls happen at night. Think carefully about these scenarios.

🌙 Scenario 1 of 2
It is 3am and you need the bathroom. You remember your bag is on the floor somewhere between your bed and the door. What do you do?
CompleteYour Results
🏆
Great Work!
You scored 8 out of 10
0 out of 10
Room Scenarios0/3
Myth or Fact0/4
Safety Check0/1
Night-Time Scenarios0/2
Key Takeaways
Check your bed height — feet should be flat on the floor when sitting on the edge.
Never use the towel rail for balance — only fixed grab rails.
Turn on your light before getting up at night — every time.
Keep your floor clear — bags, shoes, and cords create trip hazards.