NMC OSCE Community Medication Chart
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2025
- NMC OSCE 2024 Community Medication Chart. Understand the community chart. learn the main differences between the hospital and the community chart. Understand a patient specific direction and how medications are prescribed, how to correctly read your medication chart and complete the documentation Prescription chart and example and read through at the end of the video.
One to one OSCE tutoring available email hannahlames@outloook.com and get access to all teaching resources, APIE scenarios, clinical skills paperwork, scenarios and documentation. Learn in a supportive small environment with an experienced nurse, lecturer, and OSCE lead. Flexible training around you. Free 30 minutes to discuss your training needs
Facebook Nurse Tutor Tutoring with Hannah / nursetutortutoringwith...
Website nurse-tutor.com/
#osce #nmcosce #APIE #internationalnurses #nursetutoring #uknursing #OSCEstudy #oscetraining #osceimplmentation #communityimplementation #communitymedicationchart #communitychart #tutoringwithhannah #oscetrainingplymouth #oscetrainingdevon #oscetrainingsouthwest #bestoscetraining #uptodateosce #freeosceresources #adultosce #oscestations #nursetutoringwithhannah
Excellent well presented. Thank you.....
Thank you good luck with your study
Thank you for the video
Hi Hanna,
Thank you for sharing ,
Having watched your clear and detailed videos, I have passed OSCE.
I greatly appreciate ❤
@@fatimaesf8364 Amazing and congratulations that is a brilliant achievement well done and I am pleased they helped you I wish you all the best in your UK nursing career 🎉
Thanks Hannah.
Your welcome
Thank you so much, very helpful. Please review all documentations we need to write in all skill in one single video
Hi thank you each of my skills videos has the documentation for each skill this is most probably a better way to review it in context with the skills then in one big video
Could you please take community Diabetes and fish allergy,epi-pen
@@lucyjose1552sorry I am not 100% sure what you mean
Hi nurse Hannah, thank you for the video. If we are coding a medication in the community prescription, do we code, sign, date, and time or just code, sign, and date and not put the time since it wasn't given?
Hi always teach code, sign, date and time for community charts
Hi Hanna could you please make video for common medicine in OSCE .
@@Slimy232 hi I include common medications for each APIE scenario in my APIE tutorial videos I think it is better and easier to remember if you learn the medications in context with the actual condition
Thanks for the video, but are we not suppose to code flucloxacilln since patient is allergic to penicillin and flucloxacillin is a penicillin derivative
Alright thank you
Hi Hannah, if i get an unclear prescription, can i code it before going to the patient bedside or do i code it after i must have given my patient his other medications?
Thank you.
@@Ngozichukwuka360 yes you can code it at anytime as you are not giving the medication so it is fine to code as soon as you notice or you can do it all together at the end
Is it possible to sign the front page as soon as I've first read it, or would that be a fail if I sign before actually administering the medication?
@@kerttusylvia1597 personally I always say sign it afterwards to as you have technically not given any medication until the end
My OSCE is in five days from today, I feel really unprepared
Just try and do your best, keep your nerves under control and remember your nursing knowledge good luck
Hi can you administer the medication with the patient address.
yes in a community setting you can confirm ID with name, DOB and address
Without the patient address on the drug sheet
@@SertinaAmankwah yes you could just confirm the GP surgery with them
Hi can I write my first name
@@SertinaAmankwah hi you need to put your signature next to the time of the medications you have given and then complete the front box which must have your first and last name, initials, signature which should match the signature in your prescription