Clinical Skills & Safe Medication Practice: Build Confidence at the Bedside
Safe medication administration is one of the most important responsibilities in nursing.
When you understand how to give medications safely — what to check, what to avoid, and what to monitor — patient care becomes safer, smoother, and less stressful.
This page brings together practical, easy-to-understand guides that help you build real confidence with everyday clinical skills, from the 10 Rights of Medication Administration to IV compatibility and emergency drugs.
Essential Clinical Skills for Nursing Students
Mastering the basics of medication safety helps you make better decisions in clinicals and during exams.
These guides break down common skills into simple steps, clear explanations, and practical examples you’ll actually use at the bedside.
Safe Medication Administration: The 10 Rights Every Nurse Must Follow
Emergency Medications Nurses Must Know (Crash Cart Essentials)
Fluid & Electrolyte Imbalances: Nursing Cheat Sheet
IV Compatibility Guide: What You Can’t Mix
High-Risk Medications: What Nursing Students Must Watch For
Medication Reconciliation: Step-by-Step Guide for New Nurses
Quiz Your Medication Safety Knowledge
Want to test your readiness? These quizzes help reinforce safety concepts and prepare you for clinical scenarios:
➤ Drug Administration Techniques Quiz
➤ Emergency Drug Quiz
➤ Fluid & Electrolyte Balance Quiz
➤ Drug Interactions Quiz
➤ High-Risk Drug Safety Quiz
➤ Medication Reconciliation Quiz
Explore More Nursing Pharmacology Topics
Once you feel comfortable with clinical medication skills, explore the other key areas of nursing pharmacology:
Nursing Pharmacology Basics
Learn the foundational concepts of how medications work and how the body processes them.
Drug Classes & Mechanisms
Understand how major medication classes work, why they’re prescribed, and what nurses need to monitor.
Dosage & Calculations
Strengthen your accuracy with dosage math, IV drip rates, and medication conversions.
NCLEX Pharmacology Prep
Study mnemonics, therapeutic drug levels, and NCLEX-style questions to improve exam performance.