Numeracy and Clinical Calculations for Nurses is a user-friendly introduction for student nurses that guides you from the basics to the core calculations required in a healthcare setting.
To qualify as a registered nurse you will need to demonstrate proficiency and accuracy when calculating dosages of prescribed medicines. The second edition of
Numeracy and Clinical Calculations for Nurses features even more worked examples and practice tests, all designed to increase your confidence and competence in calculating drug dosages and performing other important clinical calculations – a critical issue in improving patient safety.
Key benefits:
- Diagnostic test to assess your existing skills and knowledge.
- Back to basics chapter uses a step-by-step approach to ensure understanding – tested by nursing lecturers and their students.
- Self-assessment tests throughout each chapter enable you to monitor your progress.
- Extensive worked examples use authentic scenarios to set learning in context.
- Summary tests provide practice for numeracy exams.
- Covers drug dosages and other clinical calculations such as pressure ulcer risk assessment tools, National Early Warning Score, hydration and fluid balance, Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool, BMI and ideal body weight.
- Answers provided for all tests.
The book also features:
- Error alerts pointing out common errors and why they are sometimes made.
- Sense checks to help you avoid fundamental errors.
- Tips to help with calculations and relate them to clinical practice.
- Appendices covering safe administration of medicine, routes of administration, medication administration records, drug glossary, a handy multiplication grid and simple conversion tables.
Numeracy and Clinical Calculations for Nurses is required reading:
- Before the numeracy test at your student nurse interview.
- During your university course as you prepare for further numeracy exams.
- In practice as you get to grips with drug doses, BMI, drip rates, fluid balance, etc.
Jadual kandungan
About the author; Preface to the second edition; Acknowledgements; How to use this book
1. Numeracy and calculation skills in the clinical environment
1.1 Why you need to know about numbers and calculations
1.2 Common calculation errors
1.3 Developing your calculation and numeracy skills
Self-assessment test 1.1
2. Back to basics
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The decimal system
2.3 Addition
2.4 Subtraction
2.5 Multiplication
2.6 Division
2.7 Factors
2.8 Fractions
2.9 Percentages
2.10 Ratios
2.11 Expressing large numbers
Self-assessment tests 2.1-2.9
3. The SI system
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Volume
3.3 Weight
3.4 Pressure
Self-assessment tests 3.1-3.4
4. Calculating drug doses
4.1 Reducing the risk of administration error
4.2 Calculating for oral administration
4.3 Calculating for administration by injection
4.4 Calculating intravenous flows
4.5 Drug calculations based on per kilogram of body weight
Self-assessment tests 4.1-4.7
5. Other clinical calculations
5.1 Introduction
5.2 The 24-hour clock
5.3 Organisation of care
5.4 Hydration
5.5 Nutritional status
5.6 Weight
Self-assessment tests 5.1-5.5
6. Further self-assessment tests
Tests 6.1-6.3: working in SI units
Tests 6.4-6.6: calculating drug doses
Tests 6.7-6.10: conversions, calculations, measurement, medication administration
Appendix 1: Administering medicines safely
Appendix 2: Routes of administration
Appendix 3: Medication administration records
Appendix 4: Drug glossary
Appendix 5: Multiplication grid
Appendix 6: Conversion tables
Answers to self-assessment tests; References
Mengenai Pengarang
Neil Davison worked in trauma and orthopaedics after the completion of his state registration and orthopaedic nursing qualifications in the 1970s and early 1980s. He lectured at Bangor University for two decades and has extensive experience of teaching drug calculations and numeracy to both pre- and post-registration students. He was made a Teaching Fellow at the university in 1999 and retired in 2012. Since then, Neil has continued to teach on healthcare courses in the further education sector and in the hospitals of North Wales.