72mg/hr
Base only on this sentence its not possible to say how much millilitres to give the patient. Every material/element/anything has its own density. If the density of the drug is very low, it could be quite a lot, if it has a high density, a few milligram would suffy.
No, Patient's gender is not a continuous variable. It is discrete variable.
6'
Not all mechanical patient lifts operate in the same manner.
A:Adam.
1.33
45 milligrams
187.5 mg
Calibrated spoons are used for pediatric patients; children. Because children's doses are small, they are ideal for administering small doses. Calibrated oral syringes (no needle) may also be ideal for administering small doses to children. Calibrated spoons may also be used in place of oral syringes for ease of use or patient preference; especially for the elderly.
15
Nasal cannula cannot reliably deliver free flow oxygen because it relies on the patient's inhalation to draw in the oxygen. If the patient is not breathing or has shallow breathing, the oxygen delivery may be compromised.
Nurses need to measure out how much medications a patient needs, a lot has to do with weight such as milligrams and litres etc. Also giving the patient the medication at the right time.
non-re-breather mask
this is the problem dose ordered 250mg infants tylenol on hand 160mg/1.6ml given patient how many milliliters
An anesthesia machine delivers a precise mixture of gases to the patient to induce and maintain unconsciousness during surgery. It consists of a gas source, vaporizer to deliver anesthetic agent, breathing circuit to deliver the gases to the patient, and monitors to ensure safety and efficacy of anesthesia delivery. The machine is controlled by the anesthesiologist to adjust gas flow and concentration to meet the patient's needs.
Clozapine usually requires doses between 300 and 600 milligrams a day, but some people require as much as 900 milligrams/day. Doses higher than 900 millgrams/day are not recommended.
Simple answer version... An AED that has a lowered dose of power due to the attenuator telling it that the patient is a pedi. This is so you don't deliver the same adult dose of Joules (electricity) to a pediatric patient.