by Robert Lapham (Author), Heather Agar (Author)
As nurses gain greater responsibility and nurse practitioners become a larger group the pressure on nurses to prescribe accurately and independently increases. At the same time, the general view among lecturers is that students of medicine as well as of nursing are arriving at university with increasingly poor basic maths skills, and this is also said to apply to pharmacy students. Students need a practical course textbook that will take them through into the start of their clinical work as a companion to drug prescribing, preparation and delivery. This is the second edition of this pocket-sized introductory guide to performing drug calculations accurately and confidently. Compiled by a pharmacist and a nurse, the book combines the essential theory of pharmacology with the implications for professional practice. It moves from explanations of the simple through to complex formulae relating to the many drugs used today, and includes worked examples plus problems for self-assessment. Unlike many of its competitors, it includes intravenous administration of drugs. This second edition: moves away from hospital bias to include more community issues e.g patient controlled analgesia, and examples: 'how to use this book' completely rewritten; includes more examples of problems and presents the answers separately so they can be used for self-assessment; and greatly improved presentation, including 2-colour text design.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 272
Edition: 2
Publisher: CRC Press
Published: 29 Aug 2003
ISBN 10: 0340810289
ISBN 13: 9780340810286