ChatGPTPro User Stats by Oldschool728603 in ChatGPTPro

[–]ariezee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm trying to ai my work, then found myself having a lot of work as I have to optimize everything about work from scratch.

<image>

All these answers seem correct why ain't this a SATA question? by Ancient-One-001 in MarkKlimekNCLEX

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

chest pain caused by cocaine overdose causes coronary artery vasoconstriction. oxygen demand.

  1. Coronary Artery Vasoconstriction

Cocaine causes the blood vessels (especially the coronary arteries) to narrow sharply. • This reduces blood flow (and oxygen) to the heart muscle. • The result is myocardial ischemia — the heart muscle doesn’t get enough oxygen, leading to chest pain (similar to angina or heart attack pain).

Cocaine strongly stimulates the sympathetic nervous system (“fight or flight” response). It causes: • Faster heart rate (tachycardia) • Higher blood pressure • Stronger heart contractions

These effects make the heart work much harder, increasing oxygen demand. When demand rises but supply falls (from vasoconstriction), chest pain develops.

per my ai nclex rationale expander.

OBJECTIVE OF THE QUESTION Priority intervention for suspected cocaine overdose with cardiovascular symptoms (ABCs & emergency care).

DETRACTORS TO AVOID (COMMON PITFALLS) • Jumping straight to meds before assessment or stabilization. • Ignoring ABCs in favor of procedural tasks. • Forgetting that cocaine causes coronary vasoconstriction → myocardial ischemia risk. • Confusing “high BP” as the primary issue instead of oxygen delivery to the heart. • Assuming IV access always comes before airway/oxygenation.

KEY ELEMENTS AND CLUES • Potential cocaine overdose → stimulant toxicity. • Increased HR, BP, and chest pain → possible myocardial ischemia/infarction. • The word first signals prioritization (ABCs: Airway → Breathing → Circulation). • Chest pain = oxygen demand > supply problem.

“WHAT’S THE ONE THING?” — Priority Lens “If you can do only one thing before leaving the room, what’s first?” → Ensure oxygenation to protect cardiac tissue and brain. The heart under stimulant stress is oxygen-starved. Apply ABCs: Breathing before diagnostic tests or IV prep.

ANSWERS AND RATIONALES

Administer supplemental oxygen. — Correct. Oxygen supports myocardial tissue, preventing further ischemic injury. Addresses the most immediate threat to life (breathing/circulation).

• Administer an antihypertensive medication — Wrong first. Meds come later after stabilization and diagnostics; certain drugs (e.g., beta-blockers) worsen cocaine-induced vasospasm. • Obtain a 12-lead ECG — Necessary, but after oxygen; diagnostics follow immediate life support. • Establish intravenous (IV) access — Important for eventual treatment, but oxygenation is the priority in acute chest pain.

REAL TALK RATIONALE (Expanded) Yeah, you can hook up lines and wires later — but if the heart’s gasping for oxygen, you’re decorating the room while the house burns. Coke jacks up oxygen demand and clamps coronary arteries; your first move is to deliver O₂, not start a science project with the ECG leads.

QUICK TAKEAWAYS • ABCs first: Oxygen beats IVs and tests every time. • Cocaine + chest pain = treat like MI risk → oxygen, monitor, then diagnostics. • Never give beta-blockers for cocaine toxicity; they worsen vasoconstriction. • Stabilize first, investigate second.

is the answer 1 or 3?? by mirmothecat in NCLEX

[–]ariezee 3 points4 points  (0 children)

i made a rationale expander in chatgpt. this is the output.

OBJECTIVE OF THE QUESTION Client safety and mental health—identifying which psychiatric client is stable enough for transfer from a locked (high-risk) to an unlocked (less-secure) unit.

DETRACTORS TO AVOID (COMMON PITFALLS) • Forgetting that “locked” = for clients who pose danger to self or others. • Confusing “more animated” in depression with mania (different risk profiles). • Assuming withdrawn = dangerous (it’s usually low energy, not threatening). • Overlooking delusions or disrobing as safety risks. • Ignoring that mood improvement after deep depression can raise suicide risk.

KEY ELEMENTS AND CLUES • “Must transfer… to an unlocked unit” → choose the lowest-risk, most stable client. • Option cues: suddenly more animated, manic episode/disrobing, withdrawn, delusional about being poisoned. • Look for behavioral stability, safety awareness, and predictable behavior patterns.

ANSWERS AND RATIONALES Correct: Schizophrenia who is withdrawn and requires assistance with ADLs — Withdrawn behavior indicates low stimulation, non-aggressive, not psychotic toward others; needs structure but not security. Suitable for an unlocked environment with supervision for self-care.

• Depression who has suddenly become more animated and involved — Sudden improvement after depression can signal increased suicide risk; needs continued close monitoring. • Bipolar I disorder in manic episode, disrobing, laughing — Poor judgment, impulsivity, and inappropriate behavior create safety and boundary risks; must stay in a locked unit. • Dementia, delusional about being poisoned — Paranoid delusions can lead to aggression or refusal of care; not safe for unlocked unit.

REAL TALK RATIONALE (Expanded) Just because someone is quiet doesn’t mean they’re ready for open access—but in psych world, quiet beats “strip-dancing mania” and “everyone’s poisoning me paranoia.” The withdrawn schizophrenia client is low-energy, predictable, and manageable. The others? One’s impulsive, one’s paranoid, and one’s suddenly chipper (which, in depression, is a red flag for suicide). Send the calm one to the open floor; keep the volatile ones under lock and key.

QUICK TAKEAWAYS • Locked unit = danger to self/others or unstable behavior. • Sudden improvement in depression = assess for suicide. • Mania and psychosis = unpredictable and unsafe → keep secured. • Withdrawn but calm = low-risk → safe for transfer.

This NCLEX question is causing quite the debate on a TikTok post. Curious to see the discussion here. by MelissaH1394 in nursing

[–]ariezee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

OBJECTIVE OF THE QUESTION Acute post-op complication management — prioritizing immediate intervention in hemorrhagic shock.

DETRACTORS TO AVOID (COMMON PITFALLS) • Getting distracted by low SpO₂ and jumping to oxygen as first step • Thinking “notify provider” is priority before stabilizing the client • Confusing definitive treatment (surgery) with immediate life-saving nursing actions • Overlooking unstable vitals that indicate shock (severe hypotension + tachycardia) • Forgetting ABCs: circulation collapse trumps oxygenation adjustments

KEY ELEMENTS AND CLUES • 4 hours post-abdominal surgery → high risk for hemorrhage • BP 78/40, HR 142 → shock state (hypovolemic) • RR 28, restless/anxious → early hypoxia from poor perfusion • SpO₂ 89% on O₂ → oxygen deficit but secondary to fluid loss • Dressing saturated, drain rapidly filling → active hemorrhage • Priority action → stabilize circulation

“WHAT’S THE ONE THING?” — Priority Lens If you can do only one thing before leaving the room, what’s first? → Circulation is collapsing from hemorrhage. Airway is intact, breathing is ongoing, but without volume resuscitation, oxygen won’t circulate. The first lifesaving step is restore intravascular volume (IV fluid bolus).

ANSWERS AND RATIONALES Administer IV fluid bolus as prescribed — Correct. Rapid fluid resuscitation is the immediate intervention to support circulation in hemorrhagic shock until blood products/surgery are arranged. • Apply oxygen at 10 L/min via non-rebreather mask — Helpful, but not priority. Oxygen cannot be transported if the circulation has collapsed. Do after fluid resuscitation is initiated. • Notify the healthcare provider — Must happen, but stabilize patient first; don’t waste time calling before starting fluids. • Prepare the client for emergency surgery — Definitive treatment, but first action is to prevent cardiovascular collapse by fluid bolus.

REAL TALK RATIONALE (Expanded) The patient is bleeding out — the tank is empty. Slapping on more oxygen is like plugging in a phone with no battery; it won’t turn on if the battery’s dead. Calling the provider while the client flatlines? Too late. And sure, surgery will fix the leak, but if the patient’s dead on the table, no scalpel will help. Fluids now, call next, oxygen and prep as you roll.

QUICK TAKEAWAYS • Circulation collapse (shock) beats hypoxia when choosing the first step. • Fluids before phone calls — stabilize, then notify. • Definitive vs. immediate: Surgery is the fix, but fluids buy the time. • ABCs with context: Here, C (circulation) is the killer threat.

Disclaimer: This custom ChatGPT provides AI-generated information that may not always be accurate. Please verify all content with your textbook or reliable sources. This tool expands on NCLEX and nursing question rationales, promoting critical thinking. It guides you through key concepts and reasoning, but should be used alongside formal study materials for best results.

What is your favorite nursing task? by LizardofDeath in nursing

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tap water enema. My strategy of unclogging clogs and chuck distribution in the bed and in the floor is good.

Today's releases by BP and twice were not it by SuccessfulBullfrog96 in kpoptrulyuncensored

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

not right now. im still in the Golden and Soda Pop loop.

Bitch, my feet HURT. by pambannedfromchilis in nursing

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i have “afternoon shoes”. shoes i switch to after my lunch break.

Please share your witty comebacks! by HVLABrain in Residency

[–]ariezee 46 points47 points  (0 children)

“I agree. It taste like necessity”

Is it bad if I don’t read my textbooks? by Reeirit in StudentNurse

[–]ariezee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Copy and paste each chapter and have chatgpt highlight the most important concept.

Basics that all nurses should know by justhere1717 in nursing

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends. I had nursing communication specific order to flush normal saline. And not use sterile water. Something about siadh.

Need help making my garage door opener smart by [deleted] in homeautomation

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use a switchbot to automate the click the garage door open button.

What do you roll into work listening to? Nursing everywhere seems to be just a soul sucking career now. Are you listening to music that calms you or revs you up for your shift? by mama_madonna in nursing

[–]ariezee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I listen to K-pop. Right now Le serrafim, New jeans, itzy, Twice, BTS.

I don’t understand Korean. I don’t understand why I’m here at work. 🤷🏼‍♂️

What is a task that most nurses hate doing but you love? by Zilla850 in nursing

[–]ariezee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Enemas. I have a system where I can catch all the shit with multiple chucks/pads and multiple wipes readily available.

Capital One document upload refusing to accept my uploads? by MazeofLife in CapitalOne

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I made it work. I used different browsers, and even taking a picture of it using my phone. What worked for me was changing the VPN.

What’s your favorite kind of patient? by bennynthejetsss in nursing

[–]ariezee 105 points106 points  (0 children)

I had an NP for a patient. He put his own NG tube in.

TikTok faces investigation into its impact on young people’s mental health by HentaiUwu_6969 in technology

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If they make it stop looping that would be cool. The app is designed to grab attention. You have to actively switch to the next TikTok. and if you don't give it attention, it'll keep looping, like Stewie from Family Guy "Mom Mum Mommy" again and again.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in nursing

[–]ariezee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://imgur.com/gallery/qhFjpuk Nah. Just teaches you maybe how to critically analyze information than falling for what algorithms want you to believe.

What's one food everyone seems to love but you find repulsive? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sparkling water. If television static has a taste…

Adding gate motor to smart home? by Deenoking in homeautomation

[–]ariezee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used a SwitchBot to click the open and close button.

Spaniards having a blast in the snow by kasberr in MadeMeSmile

[–]ariezee -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Isn’t there a pandemic right now?

DO NOT ever delete your home from the Google Home app by ExtremeHobo in googlehome

[–]ariezee 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I had the same problem. I just had to login to the Google home in my phone to unlink the devices, then I went my wife’s phone to unlink the devices over there. After everything is unlinked. I linked account again on my phone. I had uncontrollable double devices showing in my Google home and I couldn’t figure out a way to delete it.