Medication Administration
Other routes of medication Administration
P.O. Medication Administration
Pharmacokinetics
Misc.
Measurements
100

What does MAR stand for?

Medication Administration Record

100

Has a slower onset of action

Oral Route

100
What must you never do with enteric or time release p.o. medications?
Cut or crush
100

The delivery of medication from the site of administration to various organs in the body.

Distribution


100

 How many times are meds checked before administering?

What is 3

100

L to ml

What is 1 L equals 1000 ml

200

List the 7 rights of medication administration.

Right:

patient, drug, dose, route, time, documentation, indication

200

What us used ONLY for medication intended for systemic absorbtion?

Transdermal Patches

200

What is the onset of p.o. administered medications?

Ususally 20-30 mins, but up to an hour

200

The deactivation of drugs in the body where drugs are chemically deactivated or changed into a inactivated form in preparation for excretion. 

Drug Metabolisim

200

When preparing the eye for medication instillation what must we do first?

Cleanse the eye gently from inner to outer canthus.

200

G to mg

What is 1 G equals 1000 mg

300

 Any noxious, unintended, and undesired result of taking a drug in appropriate doses 

adverse reaction

300

What directions would you give a parent when educating how to instill ear drops for their 3 year old.

Pull lower ear lobe down and backward prior to instillation.

300
How do you help prevent aspiration when administering p.o. medications?
Patient should be in a 90-degree seated position.
300
The movement of a drug from the site of administration into the bloodstream. 

 Absorption

300

How far should you insert a rectal suppository in an adult.

1 to 3 inches. NEVER force.

300

32 oz to lb.

What is 2 lbs

400

A pre-existing condition that makes it unsafe or otherwise inappropriate to administer a particular drug         

 Contraindication

400

When is a rectal medication contraindicated?

When there is active rectal bleeding. 

400
What is the difference between bucccal and sublingual?
Sublingual is under the tongue and buccal is in the back of the mouth between the cheek and the back of the tongue (behind the last molar).
400

The ultimate removal of drug molecules from their sites of action and and elimination from the body.

Excretion 

400

When are oral mediations contraindicated?

Patients with impaired swallowing. Risk for aspiration is to great.

Patients who have nausea or vomiting.

NPO

Absence of a gag reflex

 

400

1ml = ? gtt

15 drops

500

How many times should you check the medication you are administering against the MAR.

 3 times.


500

What are some reasons that a patient may not adhere to medication regimen.

Cost.

Visual and motor deficit: Can not read label or manipulate bottles/syringes.

Unable to tolerate side effects.

Forgetfulness

Impaired mental capacity

Do symptoms of disease

Does not believe in the medication regimen

500

What are the essential parts of a medication order.

Patient's full name.

Date and time 

Name of the medication

Dosage.  frequency 

Route of administration

Signature of the provider.

500
Where are drugs metabolized.
Kidneys

Liver

Gastrointestinal tract.
Lungs

Blood Plasma are primary organs of drug metabolism


500

What are ways you can help a person who has difficulty swallowing take their medications.

You may crush the tablets if not contraindicated

See if the medication is available in liquid form

Gently massage the area just below the chin to initiate swallowing.

Ask for a speech (swallow) consult and collaborate with the speech therapist for other suggestions.

500

10:15pm in military time`

What is 2215

600

Besides using 2 identifiers what do you ask the patient before administering a new medication

Do you have any allergies?

600

Injection into a vein

What is intravenous

600

Given on a regular schedule until the provider cancels or replaces the order

What is routine order

600

Primary excretion of medications from the body takes place where?

What is the kidneys

600

How many identifiers do you use before administering medications

What is 2

600

2300

What is 11:00 pm

700

Drugs that enter through the GI tract

What is enteral

700

Injection into a muscle 18 - 27 gauge

45 to 90 degree angle depending on patients size

What is IM

700

Most convenient and easiest administration

What is oral
700

Expected response

What is therapeutic effects

700

Given at the request of a patient or when the nurse observes the need

What is prn order

700

4 hrs equals how many minutes

what is 240 minutes

800

The official name of a drug

generic name

800

ID, SQ, IV or IM

What are parenteral routes

800

What is the biggest risk associated with oral administration of medications?

What is aspiration

800

Higher concentration to lower concentration

What is diffusion

800

To be given once and immediately

What is stat

800

30 ml = ? tbsp

2 tbsp

900

Applied to the skin or mucous membranes for a localized effect

What is topical administration

900

Administered through nasal or oral passages

What is inhalation route

900

Types of medications that you don't crush.  Name 3

What is enteric coated, XL, SR

900

Unintended response

What are adverse effects

900

To be given once up to 90 minutes after the order is given

What is now order

900

1 cup = ? mL

240

1000

An older adult patient needs an intramuscular injection of antibiotic.  Which site is best to use?

What is ventrogluteal

1000

Administered to the eye area for a localized effect.

What is intraocular route

1000

The essential component that is missing

Jane Doe

September 23, 2023  0735

Amoxicillin 250 mg every 8 hours for 10 days

Dr. John Smith

What is route

1000

Medication reaches the intended site and begins to break down

What is metabolism

1000

PCN

What is penicillin

1000

1tsp = ? mL

5 mL

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