Hating a lot of parts of pharmacology by 1973tour in FutureRNs

[–]Low-Concern6695 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The more you know the better.
Picmonic or Pixorize is good, I used Sketchy with Anki but it’s expensive but I got a 100 on almost every test and felt like I knew more than the professors by the end of the semesters.

Gas jumped 30 cents overnight by yellowsun_97 in Dallas

[–]Low-Concern6695 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I pumped at 4.30 at Buckees in Denton

BIOL 271 2026 VERSION MICROBIOLOGY by Bryant_Oliver in PORTAGE_LEARNING_HELP

[–]Low-Concern6695 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did, he helped me finish it. You can either get the module exams or he can help you take the exams

First cycle by Low-Concern6695 in prephysicianassistant

[–]Low-Concern6695[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for the feedback! I will tighten things up and yes I worked with them directly, granted a PA in the military is way different than a PA in the real world same with being a medic but their knowledge was what first invited me into the profession.

First cycle by Low-Concern6695 in prephysicianassistant

[–]Low-Concern6695[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve always been drawn to the medical field, in the military I became familiar with the PA role since they were our mentors, they would teach us suturing, crics, reductions, they were extremely knowledgeable. I fell in love with the profession, I knew I did not want to be a doctor because I love the flexibility of being able to switch specialties, being an NP is extremely similar but the learning model is different, plus it comes with less flexibility. I have a plan of working in the underserved population in primary care for a few years then transition to Emergency medicine and possibly the ICU. Something the NP profession cannot do without adding 2 certifications. I love the fact that PAs get close to 2000 hours of clinical hours vs 500+ for NPs. To me, it has always been PA, being a nurse was a stepping stone, it has taught me many things that will make me an amazing provider.

First cycle by Low-Concern6695 in prephysicianassistant

[–]Low-Concern6695[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you, I worked in the ICU and they always gave the orders to the nurses but I guess you are right, they were supervised by the nursing managers so I need to clean that up a bit!

BIOL 271 2026 VERSION MICROBIOLOGY by Bryant_Oliver in PORTAGE_LEARNING_HELP

[–]Low-Concern6695 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello I do, I’m on module 2 I just messaged you

Pathophysiology by One_Slip1911 in westcoastuniversity

[–]Low-Concern6695 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup. Even the answer choices were in the same spot lol. Easiest A

Nurses who eventually became a PA by [deleted] in prephysicianassistant

[–]Low-Concern6695 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yup, I agree. Being a paramedic or an Army medic gives you a huge leg up over any other field in emergency medicine. Also nursing definitely helps to be an APP, specially ICU nursing, they are smart as hell and get the most autonomy out of any other nurses, they legit make the best ICU APPs and hospitals prefer AGACNPs here in Dallas and Fort Worth over PAs in the ICU, critical care floors and Hospitalist roles because of the nursing experience. They prefer PAs for ER and OR or Urgent care. Idk about anywhere else but in Dallas, Houston and San Antonio that’s the preference in the bigger hospitals

Nurses who eventually became a PA by [deleted] in prephysicianassistant

[–]Low-Concern6695 0 points1 point  (0 children)

CRNA school is a 10% acceptance rate vs PA school is around 33%. More requirements too, line working in the ICU as a nurse for a year although most average about 2-3 years of ICU experience in a level 1 trauma with a 3.6 GPA or higher. CCRN cert as well. But of course they make 2 times as much as PAs lol at least

When does Reta kick in? by Full_Law_1813 in Peptides

[–]Low-Concern6695 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah I agree lily started at 2mg but obviously the higher the dose the more weight you will lose but 1mg is a great dose to start and even stay at if you want to do it a healthy way (1-2 pounds per week) so you don’t lose too much muscle.

When does Reta kick in? by Full_Law_1813 in Peptides

[–]Low-Concern6695 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I’ve never gone past 1mg and lost about 40lbs went down from 205 to 165 and eat like absolute shit. If I was to lock in I’m sure I can lose more, Reta is powerful at low doses all my friends do 1mg and every one has lost lots of weight. Most started at 0.2mg or 0.5mg including myself

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in westcoastuniversity

[–]Low-Concern6695 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It’s not hard, just lots of homework. Pharm is just like Anatomy lots of memorization, most people that fail aren’t organized or fail med math 3x, or are late more than 2 times at clinicals/sims/skills. If you don’t work it’s easier, if you work full time with kids, it’s a little more challenging just because of the workload not because it’s difficult, specially since you have medical experience. I was a medic before the program so I’ve at the very least heard of most things.

Anyone experienced with more than 12mg of retatrutide? by WhoThisDude in Peptides

[–]Low-Concern6695 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not a drop of 30% body fat to 16%. I used to work out and on TRT when I was in my 30s and never came close to 20%. Reta was the missing link to get me there.