Published Apr 27, 2012
ashleyisawesome, BSN, RN
804 Posts
im entering my last semester of nursing school , and we are about to be picking preceptorships.. i currently work as a pca on an ortho floor and i think im going to precept there with hopes of getting a job there after graduation.. i was wondering if you guys could give me some examples of commonly used meds on ortho floors so i can brush up before preceptorship.. ill give you a list of meds i think are commonly used.
lots and lots of pain meds: tylenol, morphine, percocet, dilaudid, vicodin?
anticoagulants: heparin, lovenox
misc meds for comorbidities: insulins, beta blackers, calcium channel blockers, digoxin, stool softeners, anticholinergics?, protonix, omeprazole, ativan, antidepressants
anything to add? anything i should specifically be concentrating on? thanks, and feel free to give any other helpful advice!
also, anyone have ortho specific worksheets/brainsheets? i have a few good medsurg ones that will suffice just fine, just wondering if theres something better out there.
bsnanat2
268 Posts
Sounds like you are already at a good place with the meds. I would advise just getting a general idea of what types of ortho injuries/surgeries the floor takes care of. With a general idea of the meds and treatments, you'll be able to ask good questions and show basic competence. Be careful. One can prepare too much. There is no way to know everything or prepare for every eventuality. That comes later. In your situation it is more important to be teachable than knowledgeable. Yes, have basic knowledge, but too much information makes you come off as a "know it all." Listen, learn, pick your moments to speak up and you'll do well.
This is a fun time in your life. Enjoy it! All the best!
LaterAlligator
239 Posts
I also work as a PCA/CNA on an ortho floor, and it sounds like you have the main meds I hear all the time. Additionally, the non-narcotic pain medications like Tramadol. And tons of anti-nausea such as phenergen, compazine, etc.
I would think probably the main things to be aware of with all of these is how they interact, since it's common to really go after the patient's pain aggressively, but you don't want to oversedate someone and have to narcan them. You can probably observe a lot of that in your role right now, I'm sure you've seen patients who conk out after a small dose of phenergen and also have seen people with astronomical tolerance to narcotics. I don't know if they use it where you are, but we also semi-regularly have patients come in who're currently on methadone, typically due to heroin use but very occasionally for pain control without a history of IV drug use.
Good luck! Ortho is so much fun and very interesting!
Morainey, BSN, RN
831 Posts
Some meds I give out basically all the time:
Synthroid
Colace
Senokot
MOM and Dulcolax
Aspirin
Coumadin
Lovenox
Plavix
Xarelto
Dilaudid
Percocet
Nucynta
Tramadol
Morphine
Prilosec
Simvastatin
Benadryl
Ambien
Zofran
Phenergan
Ancef
Clindamycin
Vancomycin
Vicodin
OxyIR, OxyCR
Tylenol
Motrin
Decadron
Toradol
Also: Gabapentin, Lyrica, antidepressants, and Ativan and Xanax. WHEW!
MJB2010
1,025 Posts
The two newer ones that our floor hs started using is Nucinta and Xarelto. I feel like my shift is mostly pain med, nausea med, more pain med, antibitoics, pain med, and bowel protocol. lol.
RainMom
1,117 Posts
ZOFRAN!!:barf01: