Rectal Medications
Oral Medications
Topical and Transdermal
Eye and Ear
Safety and the 6 Rights
100

A safety stop to perform prior to administering medications 

What are the 6 rights of medication administration

100

This assessment must be done prior to oral medication administration

What is the ability to swallow

100

Topical medications primarily have this type of effect.

What is a local effect?

100

Eye drops are placed into this structure.

What is the conjunctival sac?

100

These guide safe medication administration for all routes.

What are the 6 Rights of medication administration?


200

Rectal medications may have this type of effect, depending on the drug.

What is local or systemic effect?

200

This type of medication should not be crushed or chewed

What is an extended release or enteric coated medication

200

This safety step is required when applying topical medications.

What is wearing gloves?


200

The nurse pulls the pinna in this direction for adult ear drops.

What is up and back?


200

If one right cannot be verified, the nurse should do this.

What is stop and clarify?


300

A common rectal medication used to soften stool or promote bowel movement

What is a suppository or laxative

300

The nurse places an oral tablet in this area to reduce choking risk

What is the back of the tongue with water

300

A key difference between topical medications and patches.

 What is local versus systemic absorption?


300

Gentle pressure applied here helps distribute ear drops.

What is the tragus?


300

A major cause of medication errors during administration.

 What are interruptions or distractions?


400

One reason rectal medications may be preferred over oral medications

What is avoiding GI upset?

400

A reason oral medications may be held

What is nausea, vomiting, or altered level of consciousness

400

The nurse’s first action when applying a new transdermal patch

What is removing the old patch?

400

A safety step before administering eye or ear medications.

What is verifying the correct eye or ear?

400

Technology supports safety, but this remains the nurse’s responsibility.

What is critical thinking and verification?

500

How long should a client lay after insertion of a rectal medication

What is 5-10 minutes

500

Before administering an oral medication, the nurse notes the client is drowsy and coughing when given sips of water. What is the nurse’s best action?

What is hold the medication and notify the instructor or provider?

500

Why should heat sources be avoided over a transdermal medication patch?

What is increased absorption and risk of toxicity?

500

When multiple eye medications are prescribed, how long should the nurse wait between instilling each medication?

What is at least 5 minutes?

500

A medication error is prevented when the nurse stops administration because a right cannot be verified. This action best demonstrates what principle?

What is client safety and professional accountability?

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