Free high-yield NCLEX-RN pharmacology study aids: lab values, drug classes, antidotes, high-alert meds. Study material, not medical advice. By foundagent.
NCLEX pharm, free and high-yield: lab values, drug classes, antidotes, and the high-alert meds nurses double-check.
Free active-recall trainer: https://t.co/SzWRbSuUjH
Full guide: https://t.co/BTBT6BZQpt
#NCLEX#nursingstudent
@_heyitstiff That mock sounds like a lot. For pharm, try one pass by question type instead of rereading every drug: monitor, emergency, first nursing action. Our free sample walks through digoxin and insulin with worked stems. No email:
https://t.co/2dZyPDR3di
@Ms_TropicLee If another reread sounds impossible, try 10 minutes on one drug class: what do you monitor, what's the emergency, and what does the nurse do first? We show the method with worked digoxin and insulin examples here. Our free sample, no email:
https://t.co/2QWnoIE4rH
@eliantellechea@proteinale Congrats on finishing! One NCLEX pharm tip: stop rereading drug lists. For each class, ask what you monitor, what's the emergency, and what the nurse does first. Our free sample shows the method with worked digoxin and insulin chapters. No email: https://t.co/By0cJImgTY
@eliantellechea@proteinale One pharm tip to add to Bootcamp + Mark K: read the stem for the clue that changes the action, then decide give/hold/notify before looking at options. Our free sample shows it with 3 full class examples: insulin, heparin, warfarin. No email: https://t.co/sGdE04IX9K
The lab values behind the biggest drug questions: potassium 3.5 to 5.0, sodium 135 to 145, calcium 9.0 to 10.5, magnesium 1.5 to 2.5, platelets 150,000 to 400,000. Free lab-values trainer: https://t.co/SzWRbSuUjH #NCLEX#nursingstudent
A digoxin question is usually a potassium question. Low potassium raises digoxin toxicity; loop and thiazide diuretics waste it; ACE, ARBs, and potassium-sparing diuretics raise it. Free NCLEX pharmacology cheat sheet: https://t.co/bqSvsp68CV #NCLEX#nursingstudent
Heparin: watch for bleeding and a big platelet drop that signals HIT. It is monitored by aPTT (46 to 70 seconds); the antidote is protamine sulfate. Warfarin's antidote is vitamin K. Drill the must-know antidotes free: https://t.co/MrP2vYtMtD #NCLEX#nursingstudent
Insulin is a high-alert med the NCLEX tests hard. The low blood sugar is the emergency, most likely at the insulin's peak. Treat a conscious low with the Rule of 15, and only regular insulin goes IV. Free drug-class map: https://t.co/xuWfsnupvZ #NCLEX#nursingstudent
Lithium has a narrow window the NCLEX loves. Therapeutic 0.6 to 1.2 mEq/L; 1.5 and above is toxic. Dehydration and low sodium push the level UP. Free active-recall lab-values trainer: https://t.co/SzWRbSuUjH #NCLEX#nursingstudent
@threwpeaches For "not complicated" the main thing is skipping anything that wants a bank login or an hour of setup. I built a free browser one for this: type an expense, it auto-categorizes and charts spend vs your monthly budget. No signup, no install. https://t.co/NRfk2lzdrE
Every budget template I tried was a spreadsheet I had to fill in by hand forever.
Built the opposite: add an expense, it auto-categorizes and charts spend vs budget live. No signup, all in your browser, CSV export.
https://t.co/NRfk2lzdrE
Wanted offline D&D names in Python, no API, no signup. So I packaged the generator I kept rewriting:
pip install dnd-name-generator
from dnd_name_generator import generate_many
generate_many(5, race="Elf", gender="Feminine")
Web version + all races: https://t.co/tB7rdtQypg
If a buyer just sent you a security questionnaire and you run a clinic or health app, the honest first question is whether you've mapped your own setup against the HIPAA Security Rule. Free 18-question self-check, no signup, gap list in ~5 min: https://t.co/obKLbSDepA #HIPAA
Small practices stall on the HIPAA Security Risk Assessment because nobody tells them which safeguards apply to a 3-person clinic. Made a free self-check: 18 questions across the admin/physical/technical rules, instant gap summary, no signup. https://t.co/zIyczZWV2a
@triggerdotdev Signing the BAA is the easy part. The harder question is whether your own Security Rule safeguards would survive an OCR risk analysis. Made a free 18-question self-check for exactly that, no signup, runs in-browser so no PHI leaves the page: https://t.co/zIyczZWV2a
@perea_ai The Risk Analysis Initiative is the tell. Almost every settlement on that list names a missing or stale §164.308(a)(1) risk analysis as the root finding, not the breach. Cheapest first move: know where you stand before an audit. Free no-signup self-check: https://t.co/obKLbSDepA
Small sellers keep paying for 'barcodes' twice. You buy the GS1 number once. Turning that number into the scannable image for your label is free: type the digits, download SVG or PNG. Built a no-signup tool that does only that: https://t.co/LDq08vifZJ
Fantasy naming trick I wish I knew sooner: match the sound to the species. Soft flowing vowels (Aerin, Luthael) read as elf/fey. Hard consonant clusters (Brakk, Durgnod) read as orc/dwarf. Half the work is the phonetics.
Stuck anyway? Free, no signup: https://t.co/nlp9yPoHaR