Allergic Reactions by Body Systems
Abbreviations for Extended Release Meds
Prefixes, Roots, and Suffixes
Safe Dosage
Common abbreviations
Metric prefixes - Multiply base unit by
Metric Abbreviations
Metric equivalents
Household and Metric Equivalent
100

Tingling, hives, itching, flushing, warmth

Derm

100

Controlled-dose

CD

100

Calcium Channel Blocker

-dipine

100

Rights of Administration

Right, client, medication, route, dose, time, and documentation

100

AC

before meals

100

kilo-

1,000

100

kilogram

kg

100

1 kg

1,000 g

100

1 tsp

5 mL

200

Bronchospasm, edema, dyspnea, cough, wheezing, cyanosis

Respiratory

200

Controlled-release

CR

200

Beta Blocker

-olol

200

Types of Prescriptions (Rx)

Routine, single, PRN, stat, standing, now

200

PC

after meals

200

hecto-

100

200

gram

g

200

1 g

0.001 kg
1,000 mg
1,000,000 mcg

200

1 Tbsp

15 mL

300

Dysphagia, abdominal cramping, vomiting, diarrhea

GI

300

Controlled-release tablet

CRT

300

ACE Inhibitors

-pril

300

Name the steps of the nursing process in medication administration

Assessment/data collection, planning, implementation, evaluation

300

PRN

as needed

300

deka-

10

300

milligram

mg

300

1 mg

0.001 g
1,000 mcg

300

1 oz

30 mL

400

Hypotension, tachycardia, palpitations, syncope, cardiac arrest

Cardiovascular

400

Long-acting

LA

400

Angiotensin II Receptors Antagonist (ARB)

-sartan

400

What to document on an incident report?

Basic demographic info
Objective
A factual account of the incident
Medication details
What you did about the error
ID witnesses
Client Statements (recorded in exact words)


400

STAT

immediately

400

deci-

0.1

400

microgram

mcg

400

1 mcg

0.000001 g
0.001 mg

400

1 cup

8 oz
240 mL

500

Anxiety, coma

Neurological

500

Sustained-action

SA

500

Loop Diuretic

-semide

500

How to perform medication reconciliation?

1. List current meds.

2. List new medications.
3. Compare and document changes.
4. Disseminate the list to the pharmacist, provider, and client.
5. Repeat when transitions in care occur.

500

PO

by mouth

500
centi-

0.01

500

liter

L

500

1 L

1,000 mL

500

2.2 lb

1 kg

600

Sustained-released

SR

600

Beta Agonist; Bronchodilator

-terol

600

Required components of a Rx

Client Name
Generic name of med
Dose
Frequency
Route
Directions
Provider signature
Date and time

600

SL

sublingually

600

milli-

0.001

600

milliliter

mL

600

1 mL

0.001 L

700

Timed-released

TR

700

Thiazide Diuretic

-thiazide

700

Name two high-alert medications

Anticoagulants, chemotherapeutic agents, opioids, hypoglycemic meds

700

ID

intradermal

700

micro-

0.000001

700

centimeter

cm
800

Time-delay

TD

800

What is Tall Man lettering

Helps to prevent look alike medications from getting mixed up

Or

Practice of writing medication names w/ mix of upper and lower case letters to decrease error w/ look-alike medications.

800

IM

intramuscular

800

millimeter

mm

900

Extended-release

XL or XR
900

State and abbreviation that signifies a med is a delayed-released formulation

CD, CR, CRT, LA, SA, SR, TR, TD, XL or XR

900

IV

intravenous

1000

TID

three times a day

1100

QID

four times a day

1200

BID

twice a day

1300

h

hour

1400
gtt

drop

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