Nursing Process
Pharm Principles
Medication Errors
Lifespan Consideration
Legal Considerations
100

Which phase of the nursing process requires the nurse to establish a comprehensive baseline of data concerning a particular patient?

Assessment

100

A drug that binds to and inhibits the activity of one or more receptors in the body.

Antagonist

100

Any preventable adverse drug event involving inappropriate medication use by a patient or health care professional, it may or may not cause harm.

Medication error

100

The nurse recognizes that drug dosages in older adults are based on which factor?

Weight

100

An act that protects health insurance coverage for workers and their families when they change jobs.  It also protects patient information.

HIPAA

200

The nurse monitors the fulfillment of goals, and may revise them, during which phase of the nursing process?

Evaluation

200

In pharmacokinetics, the time required for half of an administered dose of drug to be eliminated by the body, or the time it takes for the blood level of a drug to be reduced by 50%.

Half-life

200

Any abnormal and unexpected response to a medication, other than an allergic reaction, that is peculiar to an individual patient.

Idiosyncratic reaction

200

The use of many different drugs concurrently in treating a patient, who often has several health problems.

Polypharmacy

200

The nurse is administering a medication, and the order reads:  "Give 250 mcg PO now."  The tablets in the medication dispensing cabinet are in milligram strength.  What is the right dose of the drug in milligrams?

0.25 mg

300

The nurse prepares and administers prescribed medication during which phase of the nursing process?

Implementation

300

Drug interactions in which the effect of a combination of two or more drugs with similar actions is greater than the sum of the individual effects of the same drugs given alone.

Synergistic effects

300

A procedure to maintain an accurate and up-to-date list of medications for all patients between all phases of health care delivery.

Medication reconciliation

300

When we consider excretion in the older adult, what body system declines in roughly two-thirds of older adults?

Renal

300

During a busy night shift, the nurse notices a medication order that reads: "Give amoxicillin, 500 mg PO three times a day."  What is the most important thing the nurse must check before giving this medication to the patient?

Drug allergies

400

During which phase of the nursing process does the nurse prioritize the nursing diagnoses?

Planning

400

The length of time the concentration of a drug in the blood or tissues is sufficient to elicit a response.

Duration of action

400

unexpected, unintended, or excessive responses to medications given at therapeutic dosages.

Adverse drug reactions

400

Unintentional adverse effects that are caused by the actions of a prescriber or other health care professional, or by a specific treatment.

Iatrogenic effects

400

The initial metabolism in the liver of a drug absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract before the drug reaches systemic circulation through the bloodstream.

First-pass effect

500

Which phase of the nursing process is used to prioritize the human needs and specify outcomes including the time frame for their achievement?

Planning

500

The lowest concentration of drug reached in the body after it falls from its peak.

Trough level

500

How many "rights" of drug administration is listed in the textbook.

9

500

Medications that are legally available without a prescription.

Over-the-counter drugs

500

The nurse is administering a medication, and the order reads: "Give 0.125 mg PO now."  The tablets in the medication dispensing cabinet are in microgram strength.  What is the right dose of the drug in micrograms?

125 mcg

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