No, just whether a drug is controlled or not. But it wouldn’t hurt to know which ones are C2. Take a look at the list in the description to see the schedule drugs grouped together.
@@Trsshpandasa7867 Definitely! I would recommend you learn the top 200 by class and stem instead of rote or brute memorization. Stems are similar in a lot of the drugs in the same class so you can group them into chunks that are more manageable to memorize. The top 200 are sorted by class/color in the spreadsheet. There's another list of the most common stems according to their class. Hope that helps!
Try grouping the drugs by class and learning the adverse effects of a drug class instead of individual drugs. Also if you know how the drug works and what it treats then the inverse of that is often an adverse effect. For example, as a whole antihypertensive drugs can cause hypotension so adverse effects include headache, dizziness, fatigue, and lightheadedness. A dry cough and hyperkalemia are specific to ACE inhibitors. Beta-blockers affect heart rate, so adverse effects could also include bradycardia. Peripheral edema is a specific adverse effect of the CCBs along with all the adverse effects of hypotension. Also nausea and diarrhea are safe bets for adverse effects of most drugs. And you don't have to know dosage forms for the exam.
@@Trsshpandasa7867 It doesn't look like it, but you could expect similar calculations in the outpatient setting when working with suspensions or injectables. Just make sure you have dimensional analysis down and you'll be fine!
Great explanation and great information.
Thank you!
my goodness i was able to almost ace the part 1 but this part 2 is such a whiplash lmfaooo im gonna fail
update: i passed!
What did you use to study
What kind of questions did you get?@@viciousnutella
Thank you so much. These videos are extremely helpful. Please make more videos on pharmacy laws & patient safety & quality assurance.
You're welcome! Working on part 2 for pharmacy math, then I'm planning on doing a multiple choice format for pharmacy law!
Great assortment of questions with full explanation of answers.
Thank you! What a lovely comment!
The best ❤
It's really questions on the test where the answer could be multiple answers, "all of these", or "none of these" ptcb can F all the way off 😭
😂 Couldn’t agree more!
I wish you would give a little more time after reading the question.
Thanks for the feedback! I'll keep it in mind.
Please upload more videos
Some of these drugs where new to me , I think I was taught the top 200 , but thanks
Yup! Some of them aren't part of the top 200 but you'll definitely come across them if you work in a community setting! Thanks for watching!
@@ungerpharmacy I glade you put them in there , that really helps , if on the exam I will know now
My exam is today, so nervous!
Good luck!
@@ungerpharmacy I PASSED!🎊🎉 😁😁
Thank you for the videos!
very helpful thank you so much.
You're welcome!
I got a question about toe top 200 drugs do we need te know the schedule drug like c1-c5?
No, just whether a drug is controlled or not. But it wouldn’t hurt to know which ones are C2. Take a look at the list in the description to see the schedule drugs grouped together.
@@ungerpharmacy Ohh right another questin do you think its helpful the top 200 drugs by the stem words? since most stem words are the same!
@@Trsshpandasa7867 Definitely! I would recommend you learn the top 200 by class and stem instead of rote or brute memorization. Stems are similar in a lot of the drugs in the same class so you can group them into chunks that are more manageable to memorize. The top 200 are sorted by class/color in the spreadsheet. There's another list of the most common stems according to their class. Hope that helps!
Do you got any tips on memorising the side effects? I feel iike allot to remeber all of the side effects and dosage forms for the ptcb
Try grouping the drugs by class and learning the adverse effects of a drug class instead of individual drugs. Also if you know how the drug works and what it treats then the inverse of that is often an adverse effect.
For example, as a whole antihypertensive drugs can cause hypotension so adverse effects include headache, dizziness, fatigue, and lightheadedness. A dry cough and hyperkalemia are specific to ACE inhibitors. Beta-blockers affect heart rate, so adverse effects could also include bradycardia. Peripheral edema is a specific adverse effect of the CCBs along with all the adverse effects of hypotension. Also nausea and diarrhea are safe bets for adverse effects of most drugs. And you don't have to know dosage forms for the exam.
@@ungerpharmacy Ahh ok is it just me or does this ptcb not have any flow rates included in the outline?
@@Trsshpandasa7867 It doesn't look like it, but you could expect similar calculations in the outpatient setting when working with suspensions or injectables. Just make sure you have dimensional analysis down and you'll be fine!
Im doomed if the question are like this
😂😂😂even me
My exam is tomorrow !! 😅😮😅
Good luck, you got this!
yes vi did
Thanks a lot!
I have ptcb_3 test coming up what does the 3 mean?
Not sure bout 3 mine said that to just took mine on 5th and passed with help these videos!! I'm estatic 😁
Thankyou
You’re welcome!
👍
👍
Its good but its too fast
Talk to fast
First of all, it’s “too”
Second of all, just slow the video shannen
I was thinking the same thing
Thanks for the feedback!