Pathophysiology☺Spring 2013

Nursing Students Pre-Nursing

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Anyone taking patho this semester? Anyone have wisdom to share on the subject?

I, for one, am scared. I'm hoping this sensation will pass, but at the moment it is hanging on tight. I've heard bad things about this class. Mine meets once a week for 3 hours. I have a test in a little over 2 weeks, and the first class isn't until Tuesday. :cautious: We'll see how that goes. I talked to someone who took patho last semester, and she/he gave me a nervous, freaked out look. Oh, and I have to read the first two chapters by the first class day. And the syllabus, though printed word, sounds intimidating. How can it sound intimidating? I have a feeling this will be harder than A&P.

On a side note, I'm curious to know if your pathophysiology class is part of the nursing school or is a prerequisite. Mine's a prereq.

I really do hope this will be a great semester! Let's help each other out.

Good luck on your test!

Specializes in OR.

Good luck, wordsofmymouth! Our first test is a week from Wednesday, covering the same things as yours.

I hope you guys did well on your tests. I did really well on mine. Many/most of the questions were like this: "Mr. John went to the doctor complaining of this, this, and this. His lab results were: sodium ___, potassium ___, calcium ___, pH ___. What is most likely wrong with Mr. John?"It is a different style of questions than I've had before, but I like it.

Specializes in OR.

We had some questions like yours and some questions in the same style I saw in A&P II, II, and micro. I did well on my test, and I'm happy. There's always room for improvement, but considering the couple of weeks I had prior to that test, I'm proud of myself.

What are you working on now?

When I took pathophysiology, my exam questions were also scenario based. I just found reading the book several times (while taking my own notes) and looking at diagrams for certain disease processes really helped. Good luck!

Specializes in Neonatal Nurse Practitioner.

Our tests are a little different. The instructors give us a few case studies and we know the disease processes we'll be tested on. From there, the test was really open ended and expect a higher understanding of the disease process. Expect to give a rationale for anything you write down.

Our tests are a little different. The instructors give us a few case studies and we know the disease processes we'll be tested on. From there the test was really open ended and expect a higher understanding of the disease process. Expect to give a rationale for anything you write down.[/quote']

See, that's how I thought this class would be. But mine isn't as much about understanding the disease process as it is knowing the symptoms. :cautious: The book obviously goes into detail, but we don't spend too much time on the process in lecture or on the tests. If you don't know the process though, you won't understand the symptoms, so I really try to study both.

Me. I've only read the first chapter but I really like the book so far. I debated on whether or not to get the optional study guide for it. I can't decide if it would be a waste of money or if I would really benefit from it.

Would you suggest buying the study guide for that book?

Specializes in Hospice, Palliative Care.

Good day, LadyPink12:

The study guide I checked out didn't have good reviews on Amazon.com; so, for me, I'm waiting and seeing what the class will be like before investing in 3rd party material.

Thank you.

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