Could anyone catch what I did wrong on this math problem?

Nurses General Nursing

Published

I took a med test but failed by 2 questions today. I'm wondering if someone could help me out.

I recall the question was asking about a medication that is supposed to run 200 mL over 1 hour and 20 minutes. Drip factor is 15 gtt/mL.

Basically, what I did was this:

200mL/hr x 15 gtt/mL

------------------

60 minutes

= 50 gtt/min

However, I noticed I missed the 20 minutes so I think this is what I should have got:

200mL/1.2 hr x 15 gtt/mL

------------------

60 minutes

=42 gtt/min

That 20 minutes made a big deal right there. Am I doing this correctly?

You would do 200mL/80minutes x 15 = 37.5 gtt/min

It's always mL/time (in minutes) x drop factor

Yikes, can't believe I didn't see that. Thanks!!

Specializes in Pedi.

20 minutes is not 0.2 hr. There are 60 minutes in an hour so 20 minutes is 1/3 (or 0.3333) of an hour. But, as the above poster said, use your time in minutes from the beginning and you won't have to worry about that.

Specializes in Cardiology and ER Nursing.

Not even close.

The formula is

Volume to be infused * Drip Factor of Tubing

Time in Minutes to Infuse Over

For your problem

200mL * 15drops/mL

80 minutes

= 37.5 drops/min and you round that up to 38 drops/min

I took a med test but failed by 2 questions today. I'm wondering if someone could help me out.

I recall the question was asking about a medication that is supposed to run 200 mL over 1 hour and 20 minutes. Drip factor is 15 gtt/mL.

Basically, what I did was this:

200mL/hr x 15 gtt/mL

------------------

60 minutes

= 50 gtt/min

had you changed the 60 minutes to 80 mins, you would have had your answer right then and there.

try not to overthink it.

leslie

+ Add a Comment