Drugs
Types of Drugs
Med Admin 1
Med Admin 2
Med Errors
100

what are drugs

meds that stop disease, relieve/ease symptoms, replace essential hormones, vitamins etc.

100

whats an agonist drug

binding and stimulating a receptor - imitate natural stimulants in the body

100

whatare four examples of a route meds can be administered to the body

oral, topical, drop, inhalation, injections

100

should meds ever be given after the expiry date

no

100

whose fault is drug interactions

doctor (perscribe), pharmacist (giving), nurse (admin)

200

where can drugs come from

plants, animals, fungi, mold, bacteria, bioengineered

200

whats an antagonist drug

binding and blocking a receptor - prevent the natural stimulant from binding/activating

200

whats a drug synergism

effect of 2 > 1 drug (big side effects)

200

what are the steps for administering drugs

get meds, med check x2, wash hands, introduce yourself, correct patient, med check, tell patient what you're administering, patient sits upright, push meds, document, monitor for effects

200

what happens if you don't report that you made a mistake

you can get fired

300

what's a synthetic drug

taken once a day that replace natural remediesthat are taken many times a day

300

whats the type of drug that has to do with enzymes

inhibiting an enzyme - changing the body’s concentration

300

whats drug antagonism

counteract actions of another med

300

what does pouring meds mean

preparing meds (dosage etc.)

300

when do you report a med error

if you believe you/someone else made a med error

400

how are drugs sorted

by therapeutic class

400

whats the type of drug that has to do with H+

movement across membrane - turns off pump that moves hydrogen ions

400

whats the difference between localized and systemic effects

localized: certain part

systemic: relief felt elsewhere in the body

400

what are the three checks

label - first and last name

patient to state name

scan arm band

400

causes of med errors

time pressure, miscommunications, similar drug names/packages, lack of education, mislabeling, distractions, burnout/fatigue, missing info on MAR, skip step (10 rights)

500

what happens if drugs interact with each other

adverse/negative effects

(OTC, herbal, rx)

500

what are the two types of antibiotics and how do they work

bacterial: kills bacteria (interferes with the formation of the cell wall)

bacteriostatic: stops bacteria from multiplying (DNA replication)

500

whats the process of administering meds

diagnosis → med entered to computer → pharmacy processes → nurse collects → nurse administers

500

what are the 10 rights of administration

day, route, time, person, reason, expiry date, medication, education, documentation, dose

500

types of med errors

wrong med, wrong dose, wrong route, wrong time, not admin at all, non-prescription med, wrong patient, documentation errors, wrong prep (not diluting etc.), not taking into account allergies or drug interactions