Medication Administration
P.O. Medication Administration
Nursing Process
Communication
Nursing Ethics
All About Pain
Drugs Across Lifespan
Process Recording
100

Absorption, metabolism, distribution, excretion

What are the four phases of a drug’s journey through the body?

100

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

Cut or crush

100

Diagnostic label, etiology, defining characteristics

What are three components of a complete nursing diagnosis?

100

“appears/seems to be,” “acceptable,” “normal, “doing well”

What are words to avoid in nursing documentation?

100

Philosophical ideals of what is right and what is wrong.

What is ethics?

100

Provocation/Quality/Region or radiation/Severity/ Timing

What is the PQRST method of pain assessment?

100

Congenital malformations produced in an embryo or fetus due to exposure to a harmful environment.

What is Teratogenesis?

100

A question that can be answered with a short, fixed response (such as Yes or No).

What is a closed-ended question?

200

Oral, sublingual, buccal or rectal

What are enteral methods of drug administration?

200

How many times are meds checked before administering?

What is 3?

200

A patient states, "I can't catch my breath" or rates their pain as a 5 on a scale from 0 to 10.

What is Subjective Data?

200

Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendations

What are topics included in a nursing hand-off report?

200

The right of patients to make their own decisions based on their own beliefs and values.

What is Autonomy?

200

Pain that has a rapid onset and a duration of less than six months.

What is Acute Pain?

200

Decreased hepatic metabolism, increase in half-life of some drugs, increased response to oral drugs, decrease in first pass effects

What is altered in geriatric metabolism of drugs?

200

Question that encourage patients to provide a detailed response allowing expression of thoughts, feelings and opinions. 

What is an open-ended question?
300

Water or a water-based soluble lubricant (such as KY jelly)

What type of lubricant should be used when inserting a suppository?

300

When are oral mediations contraindicated?

What is impaired swallowing, nausea/vomiting, NPO, absence of gag reflex.

300

Lab values, vital signs, head-to-toe assessment

What are examples of objective data?

300

Clarity, Conciseness, Relevance, Tone, Non-verbal cues

What are Components of Effective Verbal Communication?

300

The duty of nurses to do what is best for their patients while also respecting patient dignity and autonomy.

What is beneficence?

300

Pain that lasts longer than 6 months and interferes with daily activities.

What is Chronic Pain?

300

Inadequate supervision, increased individual variations, low therapeutic index medications, drug accumulation, polypharmacy and chronic illness.

What are attributing factors to adverse drug reactions in the geriatric client?

300
Giving a patient a false sense of security or confidence that is not based on facts. 

What is false reassurance?

400

Right patient, right drug, right time, right dose, right route.

What are the 5 rights of medication administration?

400

How do you help prevent aspiration when administering p.o. medications?

Patient should be in a 90-degree seated position.

400

Assessment, gather data, prioritize patient care needs using Maslow Hierarchy of Needs.

What steps need to be completed before making a nursing diagnosis?

400

Synthesis of information with relationships identified and formalized.

What is knowledge?

400

Keeping promises and being faithful and true to professional responsibilities.

What is Fidelity?

400

Chronic pain that is difficult or impossible to manage ordinary medical, surgical, nursing, or pharmaceutical measures.

What is Intractable Pain?

400

Drug passes through the GI tract to the liver and metabolized to an inactive form then excreted

What is the First Pass Effect?

400

A non-therapeutic communication technique where a caregiver offers solutions based on their own personal thoughts or opinions.

What is giving unsolicited advice?

500

Nasal congestion that occurs when you overuse nasal sprays.

What is Rebound Congestion?

500

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

What is aspiration

500

Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic and Timely

What are the criteria for a patient goal/outcome?

500

This independent, not-for-profit organization accredits and certifies health care organizations and programs in the United States.

What is The Joint Commission?

500

The obligation not to harm a patient.

What is non-maleficence?

500

Chronic pain that occurs from injury to one or more nerves.

What is Neuropathic Pain?

500

The relationship between too much drug and not enough.

What is the Therapeutic Index?

500

A patient-centered process of using verbal and nonverbal communication to connect and correspond with patients.

What is Therapeutic Communication?

600

FDA regulated warnings on products that carry risks of death or serious injury.

What are Black Box Warnings?

600

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

What is enteric coated, XR, SR?

600

When a nurse attempts to heal the whole person, the patient benefit is care that is described as this.

What is Holistic Care?

600

In your nursing note, this information informs the health care team what was done for the patient.

What is a nursing ACTION/intervention?

600

Fidelity, beneficence, autonomy, nonmaleficence

What are the 4 main principles that are part of the Nursing Code of Ethics?

600

Mechanical, Chemical, Thermal

What are the different types of noxious stimuli?

600

The most important factor when determining a child’s dose of commonly used pain medicines or fever reducers, including acetaminophen and ibuprofen.

What is the child's weight?

600

Repeating what the patient said using your own words to summarize the message you received.

What is restating?

700

Intravenous, intramuscular, subcutaneous and intrathecal.

What are parenteral methods of drug administration?

700

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

What is a routine order?

700

This step involves measuring the extent to which the patient achieved the outcomes.

What is evaluation?

700

Provides proof of your work and care that has been provided to a patient.

What is nursing documentation?

700

A situation where a nurse must make a decision or perform an act that confilcts with their personal values or with the Code of Ethics for Nursing. 

What is an Ethical Dilemma in Nursing?
700

An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage"

What is Pain?

700

A tightly locked layer of cells that defend your brain from harmful substances, germs and other things that could cause damage

What is the Blood-Brain Barrier?

700

Respect, time, patience, honesty, compassion.

What are five essential components of therapeutic communication?

800

Applied to the skin or mucous membranes for a localized effect

What is topical administration

800

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.

800

In this step, the nurse analyzes patient data to identify patient strengths and health problems.

What is diagnosing?

800

This is private for the user, changed frequently, and should not be shared with anyone.

What is a password?

800

This occures when a nurse knows the ethically correct action to take but feels powerless to take that action.

What is Moral Distress?

800

Psychological (distraction), repositioning, physical therapy, thermal therapy, Complimental Alternative Therapy (CAM) approaches. 

What are nonpharmacological pain management techniques. 

800

This influence can cause non-compliance with medications due to adverse side effects such as impotence, gynecomastia, and increased hair growth.

What is Gender?

800

Communication that includes eye contact, facial expressions, posture, and body language. 

What is non-verbal communication?

900

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

Adverse reaction

900

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

What is a prn order?

900

This step involves collecting, validating, and communicating patient data.

What is assessing?

900

RN asks the PCA to change the patient's dressing and notify her of the patient's drainage.

What is negligent or inappropriate delegation and supervision?

900

The ability to act ethically and in the best interest of the patient, even if it involves personal risk or discomfort. 

What is Moral Courage?

900

Constipation, nausea/vomiting, pruritis, respiratory depression, drowsiness. 

What are some opioid analgesic side effects?

900

Patients have this “right” related to their medications due to religious or other cultural objections.

What is The Right to Refuse?

900

The technique of showing genuine interest in what your patient has to say (nodding and responding "I see).

What is active listening?

1000

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

Do you have any allergies?

1000

To be given once and immediately

What is a STAT order?

1000

In this step, the nurse carries out the plan of care.

What is implementing?

1000

These essential pieces of information should end all nursing documentation.

What is a signature with credentials?

1000

An individual's ability to make moral choices based on some notion of right and wrong and to be held accountable for these actions. 

What is Moral Agency?

1000

This is a normal process of pain stimuli caused by tissue injury or damage.

What is Nociceptive Pain?

1000

The categories of drugs that should be avoided during pregnancy is what?

What are Categories D and X?

1000

The technique of repeating what you think the patient is saying and asking whether you are making a correct interpretation. 

What is seeking clarification?

M
e
n
u