Key Concepts
Overview
Transfusion Reactions: First Actions (Hematology & Oncology) connects hematology/oncology assessment to safe nursing judgment: recognize risk early, protect airway and perfusion, prevent bleeding and infection, and escalate when red flags cluster. Canadian items may use metric units and provincial wording; prioritization logic matches NCLEX-RN. Pathway context (RN, Canada). This lesson supports NCLEX-RN preparation with Canada-friendly practice framing (SI labs where shown, interprofessional norms). Continue with related lessons from the pathway lesson hub. Learning objectives - Interpret the stem’s priority threat using vitals, labs, and symptoms together. - Apply evidence-informed nursing actions within scope and hospital policy. - Teach patients and families clear return precautions without delaying urgent care when unstable. Why it matters for nursing care: Transfusion Reactions: First Actions requires early recognition, careful trend assessment, and rapid prioritization when the patient begins to deteriorate. Clinical decisions should connect the underlying pathophysiology to the bedside picture so the nurse can distinguish a stable finding from a red flag that changes urgency, monitoring frequency, and provider communication. Exam relevance: Examiners use Transfusion Reactions: First Actions to probe prioritization, monitoring, and escalation...
