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ashulee89

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  1. Very frustrated at this point and I'm trying to find anyone else in a similar situation. I applied for Texas A&M Corpus FNP program for 2018 in April. It's been almost 2 months and my status still says "pending admission decision". I've read another article on here of other people who have received acceptance letters and I work with a few girls who have already been declined. I called the school and one rep told me "oh the decisions have been made, it's not possible to have a pending status. I gave her my student ID and she's like wow that's so weird." But connected to me to a voicemail who never returned my call. I called again yesterday and was told they were still making decisions clearly since mine says pending and I just need to wait. Anybody else having this issue?
  2. Congrats on graduating! We'll be taking NCLEX the same day! Our school required us to pass all of our ati exams. For pharm, I made a chart that they recommended in one of the videos when you go and remediate. It had different drug classifications, side effects, interactions, etc. I also looked around for a site that had prefixes and suffixes for drugs to help me break down what they were. It REALLY helped me. They gave us a comprehensive book at the ati live review and it kind of compressed a bunch of important fundamentals info ( proper crutch/cane gait, etc) do you look at the rationales when testing? I read ALL of them, no matter if I got the question right or wrong. Best of luck to you!
  3. I can't say I understand what you're going through completely, but I can relate to most. You are overwhelmed. Try your best to look for an outlet. When I feel overwhelmed I cry my eyes out and then go to the gym. Find someone who can sit down with you and listen, and then take some time to do something that will give your mind some relief from the craziness. Almost every other week I think "why in the world am I putting myself through this". Keep telling yourself it'll be worth it. Think about how proud your family (including the recently lost) will be that amongst all of the chaos, u did it. Keep pushing, before u know it we'll be out for break :) Best of luck to u
  4. I'm in level 3 of 4 levels and I haven't gained anything. This semester is the hardest by far so we'll see what happens once i'm done. Where I live we have a 24 hour gym that i go to. I am NOT the type of person who can function with 3 hours of sleep. But I'm slowing realizing that my workouts are getting later because of the amount of time each day i spend studying, working, or at the school. I wouldn't stress it too much. Try to find a schedule that works for you and try your best not to talk yourself out of it. Thats a constant battle with me!
  5. Thank you! I always make things more complicated than they are.
  6. Thank you for the reply. After taking a well needed break to go work out and clear my head, I started to try and think in simpler terms. I came up with 25mg divided by 2.5mg/hr which equals 10 hours/ 250 mL. 250mL divided by 10 equals 25mL/hr. I hope I got it right this time. I was really trying to figure it out. Since the physician ordered 100mL/hr of the total cardene and NS i subtracted 100mL/hr from 25mL/hr Cardene to equal 75mL/hr NS. I appreciate your help
  7. Hello All! I'm a little confused on an infusion rate problem and was trying to seek some advice to point me in the right direction. The problem states... " The physician orders nicardipine hydrochloride (Cardene) 25 mg/250 mL, NS for peripheral IV starting at 2.5 mg per hour, and titrate by 2.5 mg per hour every 15 minutes to reach the goal for the first hour, which is to achieve 25% reduction of the initial MAP. Call the physician if the dosing range of 15 mg per hour has been reached and the MAP is still not at target goal for the first hour of treatment, or up to 4 dose increases. Lower the blood pressure within 6 hours to 160/100 mm Hg. Adjust the IV rate so that the IV fluids plus the nicardipine IV drip are equal to 100 mL per hour, in total. Call the physician if the IV fluids must go above 100 mL per hour to provide the nicardipine. Explain what rate to initially set both the nicardipine drip and the NS maintenance fluids" My drug book states to set the rate for Cardene at 50mL/hr? I guess I'm confused because it doesn't tell me exactly how much time to infuse it. I'm completely confused about the normal saline for 2.5mg/hour. Any advice is certainly appreciated. Thanks :)
  8. I was going to post on here not to underestimate an online test. I'm an e-learning nursing student so all of my exams except the final are online and it is very very hard even with a book. BUT, we're talking about non-nursing students and i totally get it haha. I had my former HR manager tell me when comparing nursing school to her degree, "It was very hard but I got my bachelor's in business and I made ALL A's." My direct manager took the words right out of my mouth when he told her, "yeah but nursing and business are two COMPLETELY different things."
  9. I have the Cardiology III. Love it. Get alot of compliments on it as well. Bought it on Medisave and they have free engraving as well. They give you "points" for purchasing certain items. So when my little sister made it into the program, I bought her the Classic II SE and got a discount. :) She really likes her Classic II. A few of her friends have already gone out and bought the Classic because they like the quality of hers so much. Goodluck!
  10. Hello All, I've been reading alot of questions on Med Surg that have been posted in the past and decided to post some questions of my own to see if I can get any help. I am currently in the online nursing program. It has been very challenging to read and learn things on my own. I am in the second semester of four semester and med surg has proven to be extremely difficult. As of now I am passing Med Surg, but barely. My biggest fear is to get to finals and figure out that I have to make a 90 to pass the class. My question is about studying. I am a visual learner. I highlight alot, I make lists for EVERYTHING or else I don't feel right lol. I've heard about concept maps, anyone out there use them for studying? How well do they help you out? Also, our tests are VERY detailed. I took the respiratory test last week and it was asking about things that were never assigned. Granted, the question was still about the respiratory system but was more detailed than I had expected. I understand theres no way to learn everything, especially that detailed. So what do I need to do in order to help bring up my grades a little? I have the mary ann hogan book for med surg and I study the content and take the pre and post tests. Will those nclex questions help me? I guess the main thing that confuses me is that the things I am being told to study are way more vague and broad than the actual test. Is this where critical thinking comes into play and I'm supposed to make an answer based on that system? Sorry for so many questions. I'm really just trying to grasp this whole thing and better understand how to take these tests. Any advice is appreciated. :) Thanks
  11. I've been there. I think its normal to feel down when everyone else has moved on, but i think the best thing to do is focus on yourself. Take it one day at a time. Focus on your 5 rights and the reason as to why you almost made the med error to prevent it from happening. Try not to think about how you haven't passed to check offs and everyone else has, in my opinion it only makes matters worse. Focus on passing the checks. I'm in my second semester and in med surg as well and that is something I had to realize. I go at my own pace. I may take a little longer than others but i'm GOING to pass it. Just know you aren't alone! Hope that helps. :)
  12. Its unfortunate that you failed, but fundamentals is NOT a walk in the park. I'm not sure about the rules of your particular program, but I just wanted to post to tell you to hang in there. In my opinion, fundamentals laid out the foundation and built upon it, and for me it was very complicated. Don't beat yourself up. Do what you can to get back into that program. I would get multiple opinions from different representatives as to what you can do. Keep trying. Best of luck to you! :)
  13. I know how you feel. My first test for the semester I was trying to read entire chapters. It is impossible to do that when working 6 days a week along with other responsibilities. I think its impossible for almost anyone for that matter haha. I took a test after reading all of the chapters, I bombed it horribly. The next time around I started reading the lesson outlines and print outs that we are given. They cover all important information that we need to know. I also bought nclex books and went over those. Took the test last week and passed :) Best of luck to you!
  14. I usually make Bs and have been known to see the occasional C. I work hard and study hard. This in no way makes me stupid, but everyone is entitled to their opinions. As others have said it just means that I need to reevaluate my studying/test taking skills. An RN is an RN. Regardless of grade.
  15. This is certainly alot for one person to have on their plate. I dont have any kids, all I can really offer is to take things one day at a time. I work 6 days a week and often feel like I don't have enough time to study. I feel overwhelmed almost every single day. Ive found that when I start to think about the things I need to do and how hard everything is, thats when I start to approach the point of breakdown. So i take a step back, make a list of the things that need to get done, and jump into it. I find it easier to put those overwhelming thoughts to rest and just do what I need to do. Is there anyway that you could stay with family or have someone move in with you to help with the rent and expenses? Is there a possibility that maybe a family member could watch your kids even a couple of days out of the week so that could lessen the time you would need a babysitter? Your situation sounds extremely complicated, but its not impossible. Hang in there and keep doing your very best. Best of luck to you :)

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