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Exam (elaborations)

Med Math, 9th Edition – Complete Dosage Calculation Practice and Study Guide

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This document contains the full content from Med Math, 9th Edition, focusing on dosage calculations, safe medication administration, and clinical application in nursing practice. It provides step-by-step examples, practice problems with solutions, and review sections covering ratio and proportion, dimensional analysis, IV flow rates, and pediatric dosage calculations. Designed for nursing and health science students, this material supports both classroom learning and exam preparation.

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Uploaded on
October 4, 2025
Number of pages
227
Written in
2025/2026
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.

TEST BANK;
Henke's Med-Math: Dosage Calculation,
Preparation & Administration

by SUSAN BUCHHOLZ 10TH EDITION




,

, .




Table of Contents
Chapter 1, Arithmetic Needed for Dosage
Chapter 2, Metric and Household Systems of Measurement
Chapter 3, Drug Abbreviations, Labels, and Packaging
Chapter 4, Calculation of Oral Medications—Solids and Liquids
Chapter 5, Liquids for Injection
Chapter 6, Calculation of Basic IV Drip Rates
Chapter 7, Special Types of IV Calculations
Chapter 8, Dosage Problems for Infants and Children
Chapter 9, Information Basic to Administering Drugs
Chapter 10, Administration Procedures




,

, .
Chapter 1, Arithmetic Needed for Dosage
.
Format: Multiple Choice
Chapter: 1
Client Needs: Physiological Integrity: Basic Care and comfort
Cognitive Level: Apply
Difficulty: Moderate .

Page and Header: 2, Dividing Whole Numbers; 3, Fractions
Integrated Process: Teaching/Learning
.
Objective: 1, 2
1. A patient/client was instructed to drink 25 oz of water within 2 hours but was
only able to drink 15 oz. What portion of the water remained?
A) 2/5
B) 3/5 .
C) 2/25
D) 25/25
Ans: A .


Feedback: Subtract the quantity of water the client drank (15 oz) from the total
available quantity (25 oz): 10 oz remain. To determine tah
bire
b.cp
oomr
/tt
eiso
t n of the water that

remains, create a fraction by dividing 10 oz (remaining portion) by 25 oz (total
portion). Therefore, 10 divided by 25 = 10/25. To reduce fractions, find the largest
.
number that can be divided evenly into the numerator and the denominator (5). Ten
divided by 5 (10/5) = 2; 25/5 = 5. The fraction 10/25 can be reduced to its lowest
terms of 2/5. .




Format: Multiple Choice .
Chapter: 1
Client Needs: Physiological Integrity: Basic Care and Comfort
.
Cognitive Level: Apply
Difficulty: Moderate
Page and Header: 2, Dividing Whole Numbers; 3, Fractiaobin
rbs
.




.
Page 1




,

, .
Integrated Process: Teaching/Learning
Objective: 1, 2
2. A patient/client was prescribed 240 mL of Ensure by mouth and a supplement
but consumed only 100 mL. What portion of the Ensure remained?
A) 5/12
.
B) 7/12
C) 100/240
D) 240/240 .

Ans: B
Feedback: Subtract the quantity of Ensure the client conasbiu
rbm
.coe
md/tes(t100 mL) from the

total available quantity (240 mL): 140 mL remain. To determine the portion of the
Ensure that remains, create a fraction by dividing 140 mL (remaining portion) by 240
.
mL (total portion). Therefore, 140 divided by 240 = 7/12. To reduce fractions, find the
largest number that can be divided evenly into the numerator and the denominator
(20); 140 divided by 20 (140/20) = 7; 240/20 = 12. The fraction 140/240 can be
reduced to its lowest terms of 7/12.

.
Format: Multiple Choice
Chapter: 1
Client Needs: Physiological Integrity: Basic Care and comfort
Cognitive Level: Analyze
Difficulty: Difficult .

Page and Header: 2, Multiplying Whole Numbers; 3, Fractions
Integrated Process: Communication and Documentation
.
Objective: 1, 2
1 1
3. A patient/client consumed 2 4 oz. of coffee, 2/3 oz. of ice cream, and 1 2 oz.
abirb.com/test
of beef broth. What is the total number of ounces consumed that should be
documented for the patient/client?
A) 3 3/4 .

B) 4 5/12
C) 4 2/3
.
D) 4 4/9


.
Page 2



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