What This Document Is
This document consists of practice questions designed to help students prepare for the final pharmacology exam in Chamberlain University’s NR 293 course, Pharmacology For Nursing Practice. It’s a question-and-answer format covering a range of medications and clinical scenarios commonly encountered in nursing practice.
Why This Document Matters
This practice question set is valuable for nursing students nearing the end of their pharmacology coursework. It’s intended to be used for self-assessment, identifying knowledge gaps, and reinforcing key concepts before a high-stakes exam. Students preparing for licensure exams (like the NCLEX) will also find this a useful review tool. It’s most effective when used *after* completing coursework and studying core materials.
Common Limitations or Challenges
This document provides practice questions, but it does *not* offer detailed explanations for correct or incorrect answers. It’s a tool for testing existing knowledge, not for learning new material. Students should supplement this practice with textbook readings, lecture notes, and other study resources. It also doesn’t cover *every* possible topic on the final exam.
What This Document Provides
The full document includes approximately 26 multiple-choice practice questions covering topics such as: antiepileptic medications, antibiotics (ciprofloxacin), gout medications (allopurinol), antiviral drugs (oseltamivir), gastrointestinal medications (antacids, laxatives, omeprazole), cardiac drugs (digoxin), HIV treatment (HAART), and pain management (ketorolac, morphine). Questions also address principles of medication administration, patient education, and monitoring for adverse effects.
This preview includes a representative sample of 10 questions. The full document contains additional questions and covers a broader range of pharmacological concepts. This preview does *not* include the complete question set, nor does it provide answer rationales.