ActivityIntroduction
Module 3 Activity

Test Your Knowledge

You have read about medication awareness. Now put what you learned into practice with real hospital scenarios.

💡
This is not a test
There is no pass or fail. This activity helps you think through real situations you may face during your stay.
💊
Medication Scenarios
What would you do in these real situations?
🔍
Myth or Fact
Sort common beliefs about medications
📋
Medication Check
Identify which factors increase fall risk
🗣️
Talking to Your Nurse
Practice the best way to communicate

10 questions across 4 rounds — about 5 minutes

Round 1 of 4Medication Scenarios
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Round 1
Medication Scenarios

Read each scenario and choose the best response. There is one best answer for each.

💊 Scenario 1 of 3
Your nurse gives you a new blood pressure tablet. Thirty minutes later, you stand up and feel dizzy. What should you do?
Round 2 of 4Myth or Fact
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Round 2
Myth or Fact?

For each statement, decide if it is a myth or a fact.

Round 3 of 4Medication Check
📋
Round 3
Spot the Risk Factors
📍 Patient Profile
Jean is 72 and recovering from a hip replacement. She takes blood pressure tablets, a sleeping tablet at night, strong pain relief every 4 hours, and a water tablet each morning. She says she feels fine and wants to walk to the bathroom alone.

Which of these increase Jean's fall risk right now? Select all that apply.

Round 4 of 4Talking to Your Nurse
🗣️
Round 4
Talking to Your Nurse

Good communication with your nurse helps keep you safe. Think carefully about these scenarios.

🗣️ Scenario 1 of 2
Since your new medication, you have been feeling drowsy and unsteady. What is the most helpful thing to tell your nurse?
CompleteYour Results
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Great Work!
You scored 8 out of 10
0 out of 10
Medication Scenarios0/3
Myth or Fact0/4
Medication Check0/1
Talking to Your Nurse0/2
Key Takeaways
Many everyday medications affect balance — not just strong painkillers.
Always use sit, pause, stand after blood pressure or sleeping tablets.
Combined medications multiply the risk — be extra cautious.
Tell your nurse specifically what you feel and when it started.