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Mrs. Woodruff
Приєднався 8 тра 2019
Hello! Welcome to this channel. This channel was created for nursing students to hopefully break down some hard content into more manageable pieces. I try to teach the way that I learn and provide not just content but also strategies for success.
I work in the hospital full-time so this is not meant to be a "professional" channel but I will add to it as my schedule allows and am always open to suggestions for additions for the channel. My background is all ICU nursing, but I have taught in Adult Med/Surg so you will see a mix of this content predominantly.
I do tutoring on Varsity Tutoring if you're interested in more help.
I have a variety of lengths of videos but I have also created a TikTok for those that find shorter videos more helpful- my handle there is @woodruffnursingworld
If you have questions, wants access to worksheets or other resources, or would like any other help please do not hesitate to reach out. My contact is woodruffnursingworld@gmail.com
I work in the hospital full-time so this is not meant to be a "professional" channel but I will add to it as my schedule allows and am always open to suggestions for additions for the channel. My background is all ICU nursing, but I have taught in Adult Med/Surg so you will see a mix of this content predominantly.
I do tutoring on Varsity Tutoring if you're interested in more help.
I have a variety of lengths of videos but I have also created a TikTok for those that find shorter videos more helpful- my handle there is @woodruffnursingworld
If you have questions, wants access to worksheets or other resources, or would like any other help please do not hesitate to reach out. My contact is woodruffnursingworld@gmail.com
Відео
Pneumothorax Differences and Breakdown
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Pneumothorax Differences and Breakdown
All about Airway: Assessing for and Maintain Patency
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All about Airway: Assessing for and Maintain Patency
Myocardial Infarction Practice Question
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Myocardial Infarction Practice Question
Being successful in Nursing School
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So this video I obviously accidentally screen shared on the wrong PP screen BUT- its over an hour and do not have the time, motivation, or patience to go over this again but you can still see the slides and hear my talking and thats what matters :) Hopefully this is still helpful for you! If you want a bigger version of the slides let me know!
Adult Med/Surg: BPH NEW Lecture
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This is a lecture video for those in the med-surg nursing course that talks about BPH-there are also other videos about this topic for those looking for more information. References: Hagler, M.M.H.J.K. D. ([2023]). Lewis's Medical-Surgical Nursing: Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems (12th ed.). Elsevier Health Sciences (US). pageburstls.elsevier.com/books/9780323792332 All images ta...
Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Tract Infection NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Tract Infection NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Kidney Stones NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Kidney Stones NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Catheters NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Catheters NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Incontinence NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Incontinence NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Diversions NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Diversions NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Retention NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Urinary Retention NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg- Clarification: GERD Better or Worse
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Adult Med/Surg- Clarification: GERD Better or Worse
Adult Med/Surg: Gallbladder Problems NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Gallbladder Problems NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Acute Pancreatitis NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Acute Pancreatitis NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Chronic Pancreatitis NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Chronic Pancreatitis NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Appendicitis NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Appendicitis NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Bowel Obstruction NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Bowel Obstruction NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Inflammatory Bowel Disease NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Inflammatory Bowel Disease NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Diverticular Disease NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Diverticular Disease NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Constipation NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Constipation NEW Lecture
Adult Med/Surg: Fecal Incontinence NEW Lecture
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Adult Med/Surg: Fecal Incontinence NEW Lecture
i feel like im back to school ...
@@kemmrthappy2804 exciting right 🤓?
Going to tell all icu nurses about your videos. You should go to NTI and present on a topic. You have a gift
@@juliachambers725 that’s so sweet! While I may come off very confident at public speaking in the videos it’s actually my worst nightmare to imagine speaking at NTI or a large platform like that. It’s such a nice compliment though and I appreciate it ❤️ glad my videos are helpful. Love to teach.
thanks for the video ... really learnt a lot about EKG .. greetings from Germany
@@kemmrthappy2804 great! So glad it helped ❤️
Thank you! Great Work Professor Woodruff!
@@nursetrainingcenter glad it helps
You are awesome girl
@@AmeyaJinu-g1p I’m only here because you are!!! Grateful to help ❤️
I really appreciate your clear explanation. It helped me a lot. Thanks
@@gayongray5278 glad it was useful!
My dad has 3rd degree hearts blockage n I don't have money😢
@@ehi113 I’m sorry to hear that- hope everything works itself out
Thank you so much, you are getting me through med-surg II, our teacher does not lecture so I truly appreciate you!
@@veronicalolita2917 so glad i can help! You’ve got this!
Anytime I am looking for a lecture on a specific subject on UA-cam, if I see that you have a video on it, I know I will understand it because you explain everything so beautifully. Thanks for making these videos
@@misskaba4792 so glad they help! I’m just a nut that loves to teach 😊
So helpful! Great details and awesome refresher! ❤
@@katherinejett192 glad it helped!
thank you Mrs. Woodruff
@@ErikTran you’re welcome!
Thank you for this
@@kabz8844 my pleasure
You are amazing!
Thank you 🙏
Hi can I ask for any manual or document which can help me more to understand servicing these pumls please.
Hi I don’t have those but they can probably be found on the manufacturer website if you Google it
I had a mini stroke about a month ago. I was not only affected on the left side of my body but also my right arm. My family Doctor has ordered an MRI to check that nothing was missed. I have fully recovered & hope never have to go through that horrible experience again.
Glad you’re in recovery ❤️🩹
The prints are not so clear..especially against the white background. But good content... preparing for my CNRN exam. thanks so much
Glad it helped! Thanks for the feedback
Im saving this video! I had my clinical rotation in the ED today. I was a little nervous with the pump but my instructor helped me along. This video will be great as a refresher, thank you!
So glad it helped!
Thank you! 🎉
Welcome!
You are such a great teacher! You have helped me so much.
That’s amazing news ❤️ so glad it helps
Pls, kindly help us circle the correct answer. Good job
Thanks for the suggestion ❤️
Good job, keep it up
Thanks so much ❤️
Liked, thanks fir your good innovation
Your lectures are a life-saver, thank you SO much for the work you do & sharing your knowledge! :')
Always here to help ❤️
nice..thanks for this..good job
Thanks so much!
i appreciate your teaching style. thanks
So glad it works for you- let me Know what else you need
You are the best
Only here because of you! 😊
Thi is really helpful, pls do lleccture on cystic fibrosis and pediatric medsurge
Hi! Thanks so much for the suggestion- wish I could help more but have no pediatric expedience or reference to help teach these topics. Let me know if theres some other way to be helpful.
Hi, Thanks so much for the response could you please make lectures on diet related toeach diseases
@@halimaoyenuga8575 under a lot of the diseases I talk about diet - I also have a section on nutrition under med surg unit 4
thank you! this is sooo helpful!!
Great! So glad it helps!
I got 7/7 😊😊
awesome 👏
@@mrs.woodruffactually am a Kenyan,just received information today from CGFNS that am eligible for NCLEX after CES report
@@biblefanatic2902 great news! I am sure you will do great!
Thank You
You’re welcome!
Prof. Woodruff. I have a question. What is the osmolality for patients with DKA. Is it also concentrated due to high level of glucose molecules wandering around the blood stream?
It can vary but usually these patients are dehydrated because glucose is leeching fluid from cell and they are peeing it out (body thinks they have too much fluid)- so their serum osmolality is high because they are in a way self diuresing because of the high sugar levels in the blood
@@mrs.woodruff Thanks so much, Prof. I have the final next week, and it's gonna be the last test ever in my nursing school life, so I'm watching your videos right now to reinforce my knowledge. Just want to let you now my classmates and I love your lecture a lot. So I hope you won't give up on what you are doing for nursing generations. I want to be an ICU nurse, so I will still definitely watch your videos over and over to maintain my knowledge base.
@@JOSEPH-ol5td that’s great to hear. I am always grateful to help and be here as I can. I don’t know where my future is but I’m sure some part will always have to do with education. Let me know how it goes.
I love you
Feeling is mutual!!!
Starting CMS & this was so helpful before going to lecture :')
Oh great! So glad it’s helpful. You will do great
hi howdy, picc lines. tpn, and central lines please, thanks
Anything in particular about them or just differentiating?
thank you for replying @@mrs.woodruff, about only the possible important nclex points on those topics not too long.....appreciate it
@@pvp1589 I’ll see what I can put together when I have some time thanks for the suggestion
no worries@@mrs.woodruff thanks
hi howdy, im new to your channel and I enjoy watching and i learned from them. good job. I was looking for topics about PICC lines coz they came out in my ngn-nclex. i crashed and burned on this topics. thank you appreciate it
Thank you so much
You’re welcome!
In question 2 Why can’t we as a nurse give ondasteron ?
We definitely can give this medication- is there something in my video that said differently? I couldn’t find it.
Where does the blood sugar go after insulin administration if they are insulin resistant?
It stays in the blood which is why their blood sugar will be elevated
are your videos based off of ATI?
Hi! My videos are based off of Lewis med/surg textbook
Thank you so much for all the videos.❤❤❤
You’re welcome!
Underline the answer
Thanks for the suggestion
RNs in a realistic hospital setting, have very little time to do everything that is being said here. A focused assessment can be done indeed during the nurse's overall patient skin assessment. onve per shift. Half can be done while pt is supine. left and right of body and anterior aspect of the body is available for assessment, right away. Left and right ear, left and right trochanter areas are also readily available for inspection, left and right malleolus, including medial and lateral aspect. When the pt is turned the entire back, buttocks, ischial tuberosities, scalp and heels can be assessed. Don't forget to open the buttocks to look at the coccyx and creases in that area. With morbidly obese patients, lift every fold, looking for fungal or intertrigo. Always feel the dorsalis pedis pulse and while doing that, ask the patient if they have intact sensation to the feet. If pt with absent pulses, or weak pulses, that is telling of the additional risk for those patients likely have decreased circulation placing them at increased risk for pressure injuries. Pt's with absent or decreased protective sensation, this pt's are also at increased risk as they will not feel the normal pain sensation associated with sustainged, unrelieved pressure to the skin on the feet, all around, heels and ankle areas. 5 minutes and keen observation is what it takes to do a focused skin assessment in an acute care setting.
Thanks for sharing your experience. We start with in depth assessments in nursing school so students can learn the important principles and then as they move into practice they can get more into practicality.
I call drag and drop “select all that apply on steroids”. I hate them. But what can I do?!🤷🏽♀️
Yessss they are challenging- only positive is you should get partial credit for them 😅
Thank you for making this videos! We used the same book for our medsurg and this helps a lot.. thank you for breaking it down too!
That’s so great to hear glad my teaching style helps
very informative video thank you
Great to hear!
Thank you ma'am.❤❤❤
So very welcome!!!
This was so helpful!!..thank you so much for your EKG videos!..please keep creating more content!
Thanks so much! I sure do try! I’m not teaching anymore so I try to make things when I can while working full time. I started this channel just making a few lectures for students not thinking anyone but a couple students would watch - I definitely will try to add some content when I can ❤️
I just want you know that all of your videos and the materials in UA-cam are very helpful , I have passed my NCLEX successfully on the first time. Thank you Thank you❤ for your help
Wonderful news! You did the hardest part ❤️ glad I could be a part of your journey
Can you send some practice problem strips please
Email me at woodruffnursingworld@gmail.com
see..id get seven wrong...., number 7: at work..in real life , because it happens; we rule out cardiac first: because i know the heartburn/chest pain IS expected with GERD , i WILL get the TUMS......BUT Myocardial infarction rule out , which is considered MUCH more serious than the expected GERD pain is my first focus,,, so im automatically gonna assess pain. before we grab the antacid.. shouldn't my first nursing action be to : dO a pain assessment to rule out textbook signs of MI ( what does the pain feel like, is it traveling down your arm/shoulder, does it feel like an elephant on your chest or sharp and stabbing or burning ) , grab some vital signs so i can document that i made my assessment on this chest pain to make sure my next intervention with the calcium carb was appropriate, JUST in case it really was an MI masked/mistaken for the "expected" chest pain from GERD. i hope that made made sense how i processed it. lol
Yeah it was hard for me too because I had years of experience working in a hospital and I was always thinking practically and real life versus perfect nursing school world. You always have to look at the answer choices provided (and I’ll tell you sometimes it’s frustrating because the answers your chose are NOT there 😅) and figure out “if I have all the resources and time in the world what action would be the best or most effective or most directly impact patients outcome” Nursing school is super tricky but they are more looking at your overall judgment and ability to assess for dangerous situations and what to do first versus practical thinking. Let me know how else I can help.