This tops it all.
What is the Skull?
This Organ covers you.
What is the skin?
There are 206 of these?
What are the bones?
Capsules, tablets, liquids, creams and patches.
What are forms of medications?
A.D.L.
What are Activities of Daily Living?
This muscle keeps the beat.
What is the heart?
Typically, we have two of these.
What are the eyes?
You can live with one of this pair.
what are the Kidneys?
Where blood cells are made.
What is Bone Marrow?
Right person, right medication, right dose, right time, right route and right documentation.
What are 7 rights of medication administration
6 basic ADL’s.
What is grooming, dressing, toileting, transferring or ambulating, and eating?
Number of muscles in the body.
What are 600?
This area houses the involuntary muscles.
What is the Chest?
This organ is very vascular and you can live without it.
What is the spleen?
The largest bone in the body.
What is the femur?
The person who fills or sells medication.
Who is the Pharmacist?
Person who retrains A.D.L.
Who is Occupational therapists?
Term meaning movement.
What is Kinesia?
Also known as Capillary refill.
what is Blanching?
This organ aids in chewing, speech and breathing.
What is the tongue?
Shortest/smallest bone in the body.
What is the stapes?
Pro re nata.
What is PRN or as needed?
Causes for A.D.L. assistance.
What is stroke or traumatic injury?
Three types of muscle.
What are skeletal, cardiac and smooth muscles?
We document on this check list every shift on every patient.
What is the Braden Scale?
An important assessment on admission.
What is the skin assessment?
It is the center of circulation.
What is the heart?
This bone has the longest name of all the bones.
What is the intermediate cuneiform
America’s most popular drug.
What Is Caffeine?
To move from one place to another, with or without assistance.
What is transfer?
Type of muscle only found in the heart.
What is cardiac?
As registered nurses, we are responsible for the initial documentation of a new patient.
What is physical assessment?