Oral/Topical Medications
SubQ Injection Medications
IM Injection Medications
Medication Safety
Medication Abbreviations
100

This oral medication route allows rapid absorption through the mouth’s mucous membranes and must dissolve completely without chewing or swallowing.

What are buccal or sublingual medications?

100

What is the angle for a SubQ injection?


What is 45 degrees?

100

This angle is used when inserting a needle for a deep-muscle injection


What is 90 degrees?

100

These are the two pieces of information nurses must ask a patient to state before administering any medication

What is the patient's full name and DOB?

100

Take the medication "as needed"

What is PRN?

200

This assessment must always be completed before giving oral medications to prevent choking or aspiration

What is assessing the patient’s ability to swallow?

200

What is the maximum volume for a SubQ injection?

What is 1.5 mL?

200

This upper-arm site is commonly used for small-volume injections such as vaccines.


What is the deltoid site?

200

Right patient, Right medication, Right dose, Right route, Right time, Right documentation, Right reason, Right assessment, Right education, & Right evaluation

What are the 10 rights of medication administration?

200

This type of medication order must be carried out immediately

What is STAT?

300

This type of topical medication must be applied with gloves because it can unintentionally deliver systemic medication through the caregiver’s skin

What is a transdermal medication/patch?

300

What gauge needle is typically used for a SubQ injection?

What is 25–31 gauge?

300

This thigh muscle is the preferred injection site for infants


What is the vastus lateralis?

300

This required medical-history question identifies substances the patient cannot safely tolerate

What is asking about allergies?

300

The medication is to be given twice a day

What is bid?

400

This type of oral medication must never be opened, split, or crushed because doing so can alter how the drug is absorbed

What are enteric-coated or extended-release medications?

400

What is the preferred site for insulin administration?


What is the abdomen?

400

This is the maximum volume that can typically be administered into the deltoid muscle of an adult

What is 1mL?

400

This safety rule helps prevent accidental needlestick injuries and exposure to blood-borne pathogens after an injection.

What is never recapping a used needle?

400

This abbreviation tells the nurse to give a medication four times per day

What is QID?

500

This location—not the cornea—is the correct place to instill drops, ointments, and intraocular disks because it is less sensitive and safer for medication delivery

What is the conjunctival sac?

500

What should you do with SubQ injection sites to prevent tissue damage?


What is rotate the sites?

500

“This location on the buttock should be avoided due to its proximity to the sciatic nerve

What is the Dorsogluteal site?

500

This safety process is required for high-alert medications such as insulin and heparin

What is two-nurse verification?

500

This abbreviation instructs that a patient must not consume anything by mouth before a procedure

What is NPO?

M
e
n
u