Chapter 9
Chapter 12
Chapter 7
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
100

from birth to 2 years; concept of cause and effect develops; learning through senses and use of body movement and language

Stage 1, Sensorimotor

100

learning by hearing and listening

Auditory learning

100

Frequent feelings of anger, helplessness, or hopelessness, Headaches, back pain, insomnia, constant worry, memory loss, and trouble thinking are some examples of :

Symptoms of stress

(See Box 7.3 for full list)

100

Verifying the medication, dose, route, patient, indication, date, and time as you remove the medication from the cart, bin, or computerized cabinet is an example of:


A medication safety check

100

Medication route given under the tongue

Sublingual

200

11 years and older; develops ability to analytically solve problems and engage in abstract reasoning

Stage 4, Formal operational

200

learning by seeing, reading, and watching


Visual learning

200

bronchial airways dilate, heart rate increases, pupils dilate, sense of hearing is heightened to detect warning sounds, Salivary glands decrease their secretions, and peristalsis slows in the digestive tract to prevent the need for bowel elimination during this “emergency” or high-stress time

Fight-or-flight response

200

Medication, dose, route, patient, indication, date/time, and documentation

The rights of medication administration

200

Medication given between the cheek and gum

Buccal

300

from 7 to 11 years; concrete problem-solving and inductive reasoning develop

Stage 3, Concrete operational

300

Environment, comfort, readiness, language, senses, and cultural/religious beliefs are examples of:

Factors that affect learning

300

The phase of illness before specific symptoms. A person may simply “not feel good,” with generalized body aches and fatigue

Prodromal phase

300

Read drug names and doses carefully and never administer a medication you are not knowledgeable about are examples of: 

Tips for preventing medication errors

300

This class of medication can reduce respiratory rate and vitals are always assessed prior to administration

Narcotics

400

from 2 to 7 years; relates objects and events to self; begins to use symbolism; imagination develops

Stage 2, Preoperational

400

learning by touching and doing

Kinesthetic learning

400

The phase of illness when observable symptoms develop—for example, a sore throat and congestion or a rash with a fever

The symptomatic phase

400

An unintended, but not unexpected outcome that occurs after taking a medication

Side effect

400

Intervention done before and after administering a medication through an enteral tube

Always flush the tube before and after to prevent clogging

500

Prevent falls, choking and drowning in this age group

Infants & toddlers

500

when patients ask you questions about their illness or treatment, if you hear or observe misinformation that you correct, and when you point out cause-and-effect connections to the patient are all examples of:

Teachable moments

500

the phase of illness when a person is slowly able to resume independence and regain their health

The recovery phase

500

An unintended, severe effect after taking a medication

Adverse effect

500

Important guideline related to eye medication administration

Never let the tip of the medication bottle touch the eye to prevent infection

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