I am a first-semester student and I am so happy that I found your channel. I hope I can have all of your videos to watch as I move along with my program. THANK YOU SO MUCH
I love your demeanor! Like your very upfront! straight forward! Your attitude is what I wish my professors were like. Why didn't I find you when I first started nursing school! Love reviewing with ya! SUBSCRIBED!
I really enjoying listening to you explain the rationale, I’m her talking right along with you . Thanks for everything your doing . I’m current nursing student 👩🎓
thanks so much for your videos! i'm just starting this semester of nursing and i feel like learning how to study is so different because there's so much to tie in. i love your explanations and you make studying fun! i read my textbook chapter and then watched your video and took notes on any extra details you provided.
Yelka S Kamara This makes me so happy!!! Make sure you watch my video on tips to pass the NCLEX. These tips are the same for your exams in the program. You got this!!!
I am in Med surg class and I just found your video. I am in need of how to answer NCLEX questions. This is very helpful. One of my lectures is mobile with 2 exemplars are hip fractures and osteoarthritis. I have been struggling with this class. I notice what has been discussed in the class has nothing to do with the exams. This is where I realize I must know how to answer the NCLEX style questions. Thanks for this . I going to watch as many that I can to help me think .
7:00 here is the rationale I found for this question: "Atelectasis is the collapse of alveoli. In atelectasis, secretions block a bronchiole or a bronchus, and the distal lung tissue (alveoli) collapses as the existing air is absorbed, producing hypoventilation. If the client were suspected of having atelectasis, the nurse would expect diminished breath sounds in the area of hypoventilation. Harsh crackles indicate excessive airway secretion. Wheezing on inspiration indicates narrowing of the lumen of a respiratory passageway. Bronchovesicular sounds are a mixture of bronchial and vesicular sounds. Bronchovesicular whooshing would not be an expected sound indicating atelectasis" Still does not explain what bronchovesicular whooshing is
I find your videos very informative and helpful. Where can I find similar practice questions and do you do tutoring sessions? I am a new nursing student, I am currently in my first semester so I need all the help I can get to be successful in my career.
Hey! Love your videos, I just have a question about one of the questions in this video, Number 2 I believe. It asks for an appropriate intervention, but the answer you mention is an assessment task, not an intervention. Am I missing a point in this answer? In other videos of yours, you have made it clear to look for key words like this during nursing diagnosis problems to know the correct order.
So I have a question so these priority questions I get ABCs but what about if all 4 answers have pts post op and my instructor said timing is important but also condition of the surgery so for someone with a Pulmonary embolism but the time is 3 days vs DVT 2 hrs post op would you pick the dvt or the PE it’s hard. There’s the ABCs and stable and unstable so would you pick the DVT 2 hours since it’s the most unstable or the PE due to ABCs
lol when she said i hope the didn't trick you with access as the first word... yes the sure did lol I jumped on it but thanks for a wonderful explanation!