Sensory Perception
Fluid status
Medication Safety/ADME
Pharmocokinetics/ADME
General Safety
100

Pupils equal, round, reactive to light and accommodation

What is PERRLA?

100

Oral and IV methods are part of this intervention for fluid volume deficit

What is rehydration therapy?

100

Drug name that is the same for all manufacturers in the US

What is a generic name?

100

Time it takes for the amount of drug in the body to decrease by 50%

What is half-life?

100

Provider order, medical necessity, and assessment per protocol are required for use of these devices

What are restraints?

200

Avoiding prolonged exposure to loud noise and using sunglasses that protect against UV light.

What are primary health promotion strategies for hearing and vision?

200

Orthopnea, bounding pulses and edema are signs of this condition

What is fluid volume excess?

200

Patient, drug, dose, route, time, reason, response, documentation

What are the 8 rights of medication administration?

200
Initial higher dose that moves drug levels into the therapeutic range quickly

What is a loading dose?

200

Diagnostic, treatment, preventive, and communication failure

What are categories of errors?

300

Making sure eyeglasses and hearing aids are in reach of patients who use them

What are nursing interventions for patients with sensory perception challenges?

300

Two nursing assessments that assess fluid volume deficit and fluid volume excess

What are I+O and daily weights?

300

Movement of a drug from its site of administration into the blood

What is absorption?

300

Movement of a drug throughout the body to its site of action

What is distribution?

300

This results in unintended harm to a patient

What is an adverse event?

400

Vertigo, positive Romberg test, increasing falls

What are abnormal balance and proprioception assessment findings?

400

Tachycardia, slow capillary refill, and low urine output are signs of this condition

What is fluid volume deficit?

400

Chemical change of a drug, usually happens in the liver

What is metabolism?

400
Medications taken orally may undergo this process

What is first pass effect/first pass metabolism?

400

Leadership, teamwork, just culture, communication and learning are factors in this.

What is a culture of safety?
500
Clutter-free, organized environment, targeted assistance, and talking at a moderate tone

What are nursing interventions that help mitigate the effects of vision and hearing impairments?

500

Fluid losses that are not measurable except by daily weights.

What are insensible losses?

500

Removal of the drug from the body, typically happens in the kidneys

What is excretion?

500

A drug for which peak and trough levels are drawn may have this

What is a narrow therapeutic range (index)?

500

Infection control practice used with all patients

Standard precautions

M
e
n
u