Nursing Compass: Navigating Concepts

Pharmacology in 15: Feed or Hold

8 min · 19. tammi 2026
jakson Pharmacology in 15: Feed or Hold kansikuva

Kuvaus

Medications don’t work just because they’re ordered. They work only if the body can absorb them, distribute them, and eliminate them safely. In this Pharmacology in 15 episode, Claire and Tammie walk through real bedside scenarios that force nurses to decide: Is this a safe pass, or does this medication need to be held? Using clinical examples like vomiting, diarrhea, NG suction, tube feeding, kidney impairment, and benzodiazepine use, this episode connects pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics to everyday nursing judgment. Learn how absorption failures, medication accumulation, and exaggerated drug effects increase risks for breathing, falls, and organ injury—and why nurses often recognize these dangers before labs change. This episode is designed for nursing students and practicing nurses who want pharmacology that actually makes sense at the bedside.

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity Nursing Compass: Navigating Concepts-yhteisöön!

Aloita nyt

3 kuukautta hintaan 3,99 €

Sitten 7,99 € / kuukausi · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

11 jaksot

jakson Where Sodium Goes, Water Flows! kansikuva

Where Sodium Goes, Water Flows!

Ever wonder where all that fluid actually goes when a patient gets a “water pill”? In this Meds in Minutes episode of Navigating Nursing Concepts, Claire and Tammie break down diuretics in a way that finally makes kidney physiology click. We walk through how loop, thiazide, and potassium-sparing diuretics work in different parts of the nephron—and why sodium loss always means water follows. You’ll learn key nursing safety checks before administration, common electrolyte complications, high-yield drug interactions (hello digoxin, ACE inhibitors, and NSAIDs), and why urine output, daily weights, and labs never lie. This episode also connects fluid balance to thermoregulation, showing how dehydration and overload can even affect body temperature. Packed with NCLEX-style thinking, real-world nursing judgment, and patient-teaching pearls, this episode helps nurses move from “water pill” to cause, effect, and safe action. Keywords: diuretics, nursing pharmacology, furosemide, spironolactone, thiazides, fluid balance, electrolytes, hypokalemia, hyperkalemia, NCLEX, nursing students, medication safety

6. helmi 202611 min
jakson Metabolism, Medications, and Why Timing Is the Teaching kansikuva

Metabolism, Medications, and Why Timing Is the Teaching

Medications don’t work in isolation—they work inside a living, changing body. In this episode of Navigating Nursing Concepts, Claire and Tammie break down metabolism as the reason medications either stabilize patients or push them into danger. Using insulin, metformin, and thyroid medications as real clinical examples, we explore how onset, peak, duration, absorption, and organ function directly affect patient safety. You’ll hear why hypoglycemia is a physiologic response—not just a number—why metformin is held for contrast studies, and how patient education must translate physiology into everyday decisions. This episode is essential listening for nursing students and bedside nurses who want to move beyond memorization and toward true clinical judgment, medication timing, and patient-centered education. Keywords: nursing education, metabolism, insulin timing, hypoglycemia, metformin, patient education, pharmacology, clinical judgment, nursing students, medication safety

26. tammi 202612 min
jakson Pharmacology in 15: Feed or Hold kansikuva

Pharmacology in 15: Feed or Hold

Medications don’t work just because they’re ordered. They work only if the body can absorb them, distribute them, and eliminate them safely. In this Pharmacology in 15 episode, Claire and Tammie walk through real bedside scenarios that force nurses to decide: Is this a safe pass, or does this medication need to be held? Using clinical examples like vomiting, diarrhea, NG suction, tube feeding, kidney impairment, and benzodiazepine use, this episode connects pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics to everyday nursing judgment. Learn how absorption failures, medication accumulation, and exaggerated drug effects increase risks for breathing, falls, and organ injury—and why nurses often recognize these dangers before labs change. This episode is designed for nursing students and practicing nurses who want pharmacology that actually makes sense at the bedside.

19. tammi 20268 min
jakson Brains, Guts, and Good Calls: Clinical Judgment Explained kansikuva

Brains, Guts, and Good Calls: Clinical Judgment Explained

Clinical judgment isn’t just buzzwords—it’s the gutsy, brain-powered skill that keeps clients safe in complex, fast-changing situations. In this episode, Tammie and Claire cut through the jargon to define what clinical judgment really means, how it differs from critical thinking and clinical reasoning, and why it matters more than ever. We’ll walk through the three big frameworks—Nursing Process, Tanner’s Model, and the NCJMM—and show how each serves a unique role in planning care, describing thought processes, and testing competence. Along the way, you’ll see how evidence-based practice, safety, and professionalism shape good calls at the bedside. With simple scenarios from choking emergencies to post-op ambulation, you’ll learn how to apply the six NCJMM steps, practice SMART goals, and reflect like a pro. Whether you’re prepping for NCLEX or heading into your first clinical rotation, this episode gives you the brains, guts, and tools to make sound judgments when it matters most.

1. loka 202531 min