Dosage Test Bank Calculator
Formula Used
Basic dose: amount = ordered dose ÷ available dose × quantity available.
Weight dose: daily dose = dose per kg × weight in kg.
IV pump: mL/hr = IV volume ÷ time in hours.
Drop rate: gtt/min = IV volume × drop factor ÷ time in minutes.
Score: percent = correct answers ÷ total questions × 100.
Example Data Table
| Question type | Given data | Expected answer |
|---|---|---|
| Liquid dose | Order 500 mg. Supply 250 mg per 5 mL. | 10 mL |
| IV pump | 1000 mL over 8 hours. | 125 mL/hr |
| Drop rate | 1000 mL, 15 gtt/mL, 8 hours. | 31 gtt/min |
| Practice score | 21 correct out of 25. | 84% |
How to Use This Calculator
Select the question type first. Enter only the values needed for that question. Choose a rounding rule that matches your test item. Press calculate. The answer appears above the form. Review the formula line. Use CSV or PDF download to save your practice result.
Dosage Calculation Study Guide
Why Dosage Practice Matters
Dosage math is a core nursing skill. It connects orders, labels, time, and patient weight. A small unit mistake can change the final dose. This calculator gives structured practice for common HESI style questions. It is built for review, checking, and repeated attempts.
What This Tool Calculates
The page supports tablet dosing, liquid dosing, body weight dosing, IV pump rates, drop rates, reconstitution, and daily divided doses. Each mode uses the same nursing logic. First, identify what is ordered. Next, compare it with what is available. Then convert units when needed. Finally, round the answer by the selected rule.
Study Value
A test bank is useful when it teaches the method, not only the answer. This tool shows the formula, the substituted values, and the final result. It also flags high dose and low dose ranges when safe limits are entered. That helps students practice judgment. It does not replace clinical policy. It is a study aid.
Rounding and Units
Many HESI problems depend on rounding. Whole tablets may be rounded to a half tablet. Liquid doses may use tenths. IV pumps are often rounded to the nearest whole mL per hour. Manual drops are usually whole drops per minute. Always follow the instruction in the question stem.
How to Improve Scores
Read the order twice. Circle the required unit. Convert before calculating. Keep labels in the setup. Estimate the answer before pressing calculate. If the result is very large or tiny, check the unit again. Common mistakes include mixing pounds with kilograms, minutes with hours, and milligrams with micrograms.
Use in Practice Sessions
Enter one question at a time. Compare your manual answer with the result. Download the CSV after a study set. Save the PDF for review notes. Repeat missed categories more often. Over time, focus on accuracy first. Add speed after the setup feels natural.
Important Safety Note
This calculator is for exam preparation. Use a calculator only after you understand the setup, because exams test reasoning as much as arithmetic under timed conditions each session. Real medication administration requires current orders, facility policy, pharmacy labels, and licensed supervision. Always verify patient details, allergies, drug route, timing, and dose limits before giving medicine.
FAQs
Is this an official HESI question bank?
No. It is an independent practice calculator. It uses common dosage math formats for study and review.
Can I calculate tablet and liquid doses?
Yes. Choose tablet or liquid mode. Enter the ordered dose, available dose, and quantity available.
Does it support weight based medication math?
Yes. Enter patient weight, weight unit, dose per kg, and daily frequency. The tool converts pounds to kilograms.
How should I round IV pump rates?
Many pumps use whole mL per hour. Follow your school rule or the instruction in the practice question.
What is gtt per minute?
It means drops per minute. It is used for manual IV tubing when a pump is not used.
Can I export my results?
Yes. After calculating, use the CSV or PDF button to save your study result and formula.
Why do unit conversions matter?
Wrong units can create unsafe answers. Convert grams, milligrams, and micrograms before comparing values.
Can this replace clinical dose checking?
No. It is only a study tool. Real medication administration needs policy checks, pharmacy labels, and licensed review.