why is med/surg a hard class to pass??

Nursing Students General Students

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Hello everyone,

I am a new nursing student set to begin the clinical portion of the RN program spring 2012. After reading a few threads I see that people have a really difficult time when there in med/surg adult health rotation, why is this??? I have A's in both A&P I & II, B in chem I & A in chem II, C in micro, and actually enjoyed the challenge of the classes because they were interesting to me, but I hated. Micro. What should I expect in medical surgical nursing?? And why is it so difficult to pass???

I think it's hard for a couple of reasons:

1. Foundations is usually deceptively easy. I rarely cracked the textbook (although I did diligently study procedures and my class notes) and easily got an A...and I'm in a challenging program where about 25% have already failed out. So, people used to not studying for Foundations may continue not studying for Med Surg. I know people who didn't study very much for Med Surg. They got low grades or didn't pass. A couple got B's because they had already had some of the material, and there are always those people who seem like they can never study and still pass.

2. You really have to have a good basic grasp of the pathology of various conditions, as well as basic A&P, to do well in Med Surg. For example, let's say you have a PT with DKA. In order to treat this PT effectively, you need a good understanding of DM; of fluid and electrolyte balance; of how the kidneys function. You need to know that materials diffuse along their concentration gradient. You need to understand the basic compensatory mechanisms for maintaining a pH of 7.35-7.45 in the body. And on top of that, you also need to know nursing-specific information like how to administer insulin IV (certainly not as easy as, say, hanging a bag of NS). It's so much more than just knowing what DKA is and memorizing a few basic nursing interventions.

Specializes in Community Health/School Nursing.
pecanpies said:
I think it's hard for a couple of reasons:

1. Foundations is usually deceptively easy. I rarely cracked the textbook (although I did diligently study procedures and my class notes) and easily got an A...and I'm in a challenging program where about 25% have already failed out. So, people used to not studying for Foundations may continue not studying for Med Surg. I know people who didn't study very much for Med Surg. They got low grades or didn't pass. A couple got B's because they had already had some of the material, and there are always those people who seem like they can never study and still pass.

2. You really have to have a good basic grasp of the pathology of various conditions, as well as basic A&P, to do well in Med Surg. For example, let's say you have a PT with DKA. In order to treat this PT effectively, you need a good understanding of DM; of fluid and electrolyte balance; of how the kidneys function. You need to know that materials diffuse along their concentration gradient. You need to understand the basic compensatory mechanisms for maintaining a pH of 7.35-7.45 in the body. And on top of that, you also need to know nursing-specific information like how to administer insulin IV (certainly not as easy as, say, hanging a bag of NS). It's so much more than just knowing what DKA is and memorizing a few basic nursing interventions.

Everything you just said has to do with "Critical Thinking". Some are good at it and others just never really get the hang of it. You are exactly right.....you have to know not only facts/book knowledge but the "how,when,where and why's" of it all.

Wave Watcher, you put it so much more succintly than I could! LOL. Critical thinking is what it's all about. Rote memorization won't help you in nursing school!

Specializes in Critical Care, Education.

PPs are absolutely correct. MedSurg is usually the first time that nursing students have to put everything together - all the basic sciences, foundations, etc. If they 'squeaked by' or just coasted in any of those classes, this is when the problems emerge. And, of course - there's the added stress of having to function in an acute care environment for the first time.

Don't get caught up in everyone's drama, especially classmates who are decompensating and/or going down in flames. Make sure you have an accurate understanding of the criteria that is being used to evaluate your performance and just focus on your own 'stuff'. You'll be fine. We all survived it and you will too!

Thanx for the really good information. I am one who usually study's hard and try's to connect the dots. Studying pathology would keep my interest. I have no previous medical experience so some things that come easy to others I will have to learn in a qwick amount of time. But I love Science!!

Houtx, I have a good understanding of my science classes and im hoping i understand the nursing concepts just as well, thanx for your insight!!

Usually, at the point where you're doing med/surg, the tests get much harder. Not in information, but the way the questions are asked. Add that to that fact, and you've also got atleast 3, if not ALL right answers to choose from, and you have to pick "the best" one. Thing of it is, the "best" one, may just be from the perspective of the person writing the question. So even if you know you're material, nothing is 100%. Unless its an ABC's question, there are usually many good rationales for each answer. You just have to pray that you and the question maker have the same rationales in mind as a priority.

Njmomstudent,

thanks for the heads up on the test taking advice, is there a certain strategy that you use??

Specializes in Operating Room.

Med/surg killed me not because I didn't know the material, but I didn't know how to answer the NCLEX-style questions. No matter how hard I studied, I would get B's. I did fine in A&P (got A's) but med/surg is on a different level. Best advice is to get an NCLEX book now, practice the questions, and learn the strategies.

Ok thank u soooo much for that insight! i will b in barnes and nobles tomorrow getting the book

Specializes in Labor and Delivery.

I'm curious is medsurg your first nursing class???

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