NURP 117 Pharmacology for Nursing Practice
Explores foundational principles of pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and evidence-based medication administration across the lifespan. Emphasis is placed on safe dosage calculation, prevention of medication errors, and the nurse’s role in promoting optimal therapeutic outcomes. Students examine classifications of medications, therapeutic and adverse effects, and interactions. Critical thinking, clinical judgment, and legal and ethical responsibilities related to pharmacologic interventions are integrated throughout.
NURP 117Pharmacology for Nursing Practice
Please note: This is not a course syllabus. A course syllabus is unique to a particular section of a course by instructor. This curriculum guide provides general information about a course.
I. General Information
Department
Nursing Technical
II. Course Specification
Course Type
{975B0D68-6F7C-4536-8DAC-DA07B85142A1}
Credit Hours Narrative
3 credits
Semester Contact Hours Lecture
45
Semester Contact Hours Lab
0
Semester Contact Hours Clinical
0
Prerequisite Narrative
Formal acceptance into the Practical Nurse program required. BIOL 105, BIOL 105L, ENGL 101, MATH 123, NURP 103, PSYC 101
Corequisite Narrative
NURP 104, NURP 105, NURP 140
III. Catalog Course Description
Explores foundational principles of pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and evidence-based medication administration across the lifespan. Emphasis is placed on safe dosage calculation, prevention of medication errors, and the nurse’s role in promoting optimal therapeutic outcomes. Students examine classifications of medications, therapeutic and adverse effects, and interactions. Critical thinking, clinical judgment, and legal and ethical responsibilities related to pharmacologic interventions are integrated throughout.
IV. Student Learning Outcomes
Upon completion of this course, a student will be able to:
- Explain the principles of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics and their relevance to safe and effective medication administration.
- Accurately perform dosage calculations and demonstrate safe preparation and administration of medications across routes and age groups.
- Identify therapeutic effects, side effects, adverse reactions, and interactions associated with primary drug classifications.
- Apply clinical judgment to assess appropriate medication, monitor patient responses, and intervene to prevent or manage adverse events.
- Demonstrate knowledge of legal, ethical, and safety considerations related to medication administration, including the scope of practice and error prevention.
- Incorporate evidence-based resources, patient education, and communication strategies to support safe medication use in diverse populations
V. Topical Outline (Course Content)
VI. Delivery Methodologies