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Dosage Regimen Designs: Nomograms and Tabulations01:23

Dosage Regimen Designs: Nomograms and Tabulations

Nomograms and tabulations are vital tools used by clinicians to design accurate and individualized dosage regimens. These instruments provide a straightforward method for adjusting dosages based on individual patient characteristics, including age, weight, and physiological condition. The foundation of a drug's nomogram is population pharmacokinetic data collected and analyzed using specific models. This data simplifies complex equations, presenting them diagrammatically or tabularly for easy...
Drug Dosing: Infants and Children01:29

Drug Dosing: Infants and Children

Pediatric patient dosages diverge from adults due to disparities in body surface area, total body water, and extracellular fluid per kilogram of body weight. The dosing regimen considers the variations in pharmacokinetics and pharmacology across distinct age groups, encompassing preterm newborns, infants, young children, older children, and adolescents. Calculation of pediatric patient doses is predicated on determining body surface area, which exhibits a superior correlation with the child's...
Drug Accumulation During Multiple Dosing: Repetitive IV Injections01:21

Drug Accumulation During Multiple Dosing: Repetitive IV Injections

Calculating drug dosage and accumulation in multiple-dose regimens is crucial for achieving therapeutic efficacy while avoiding toxicity. This involves determining the plasma drug concentrations over time to optimize dosing schedules. The principle of superposition is fundamental in this process, allowing for the prediction of drug concentration in plasma following multiple doses based on single-dose data.The principle of superposition asserts that the plasma concentration-time curves from...
IV Infusion to Oral Dosing: Conversion Methods01:28

IV Infusion to Oral Dosing: Conversion Methods

The development of extended-release formulations has facilitated the transition from intravenous to oral medication, offering a more convenient and patient-friendly approach to drug administration. This transition, however, requires careful management to ensure that therapeutic drug levels are maintained, preserving efficacy and avoiding adverse effects. Understanding pharmacokinetic principles and dosage calculations is critical during this process.Pharmacokinetics of the...
Dosage Regimens: Designs and Approaches01:28

Dosage Regimens: Designs and Approaches

Designing a dosage regimen, which refers to the manner of drug administration, is a complex process involving the selection of drug dose, route, and frequency. This process is underpinned by pharmacokinetic parameters derived from tests and population averages. These parameters are then tailored to patient-specific variables such as diagnosis, demographics, and allergy status. Once therapy commences, therapeutic response monitoring is critical and achieved through clinical and physical...
Drug Dosing in Renal Diseases: Dose Adjustments Based on Drug Clearance and Elimination Rate Constant01:25

Drug Dosing in Renal Diseases: Dose Adjustments Based on Drug Clearance and Elimination Rate Constant

In patients with renal disease, dosage adjustments are necessary to maintain therapeutic plasma drug concentrations and prevent toxicity or subtherapeutic exposure. Renal impairment alters drug pharmacokinetics, especially in conditions like uremia, where changes such as prolonged elimination half-life and altered apparent volume of distribution can significantly affect drug disposition. These changes require careful modification of the dosing regimen to achieve the desired clinical...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 22, 2026

Quadruple-Checkerboard: A Modification of the Three-Dimensional Checkerboard for Studying Drug Combinations
11:15

Quadruple-Checkerboard: A Modification of the Three-Dimensional Checkerboard for Studying Drug Combinations

Published on: July 24, 2021

How do nurses solve drug calculation problems?

Kerri Wright1

  • 1University of Greenwich, Avery Hill Campus, Eltham, London, SE9 2UG, United Kingdom. k.wright@gre.ac.uk

Nurse Education Today
|May 19, 2012
PubMed
Summary

Senior nurses use diverse strategies for drug calculations, focusing more on understanding the problem than solving it. Nurse educators should ensure calculation questions reflect real clinical scenarios.

Area of Science:

  • Nursing Education
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Pharmacology

Background:

  • Accurate drug calculations are critical for patient safety in nursing.
  • Understanding the cognitive processes behind drug calculation is essential for effective teaching.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the cognitive strategies senior nurses employ when solving written drug calculation problems.
  • To identify the key cognitive steps involved in nurse-led drug dosage calculations.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized verbal protocol methodology with eight senior nurses in an educational setting.
  • Employed verbal protocol analysis to examine the cognitive processes during problem-solving.

Main Results:

  • Nurses employed a variety of strategies beyond the standard nursing formula.

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Last Updated: May 22, 2026

Quadruple-Checkerboard: A Modification of the Three-Dimensional Checkerboard for Studying Drug Combinations
11:15

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Published on: July 24, 2021

Diagonal Method to Measure Synergy Among Any Number of Drugs
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Application and Methodology of the Non-destructive 19F Time-domain NMR Technique to Measure the Content in Fluorine-containing Drug Products
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Application and Methodology of the Non-destructive 19F Time-domain NMR Technique to Measure the Content in Fluorine-containing Drug Products

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  • Cognitive processes revealed a significant emphasis on problem representation over direct calculation.
  • A majority of cognitive steps were dedicated to interpreting and structuring the problem.
  • Conclusions:

    • Nurse educators must prioritize teaching problem representation skills for drug calculations.
    • Assessment questions for drug calculations should closely mirror authentic clinical practice scenarios.
    • Improving problem representation can enhance nurses' accuracy in medication dosage calculations.