I'm a Licensed Practical Nurse candidate and I've been studying for the NCLEX-PN for about 6 weeks now. I keep getting destroyed by pharmacology questions — specifically cardiac meds and psychiatric medication interactions. My overall practice scores are sitting at 72–75% which I've heard is passing range, but pharm is pulling that average down.
I've been using ATI and Saunders and doing about 100 practice questions a day. The problem isn't drug names — I've got those memorized. It's the clinical reasoning questions where they describe symptoms and you have to decide what the nurse should do next. I'm second-guessing myself constantly on those.
Is 72–75% on ATI actually a reliable passing predictor? And does anyone have a system for tackling the "what should the nurse do first" type questions? I've been told to think ABCs and Maslow but it doesn't always feel straightforward when there are four plausible-looking answers.
For cardiac pharm specifically — know your antidysrhythmics and what toxicity looks like for digoxin and lithium. Those two get tested constantly because the toxicity symptoms are counterintuitive. Digoxin GI symptoms presenting before cardiac symptoms is something a lot of people miss.
The psychiatric med interactions section is rough. Know MAOI interactions cold — there are usually 2–3 questions on it and they're specific about what you can and can't combine. Tyramine foods and serotonin syndrome symptoms are both fair game.
I used the Hurst Review for weak areas and found it better than Saunders for explaining the reasoning behind answers. Passed with 85 questions on my first attempt after struggling the same way you're describing. The NGN-style questions get easier once you stop second-guessing and commit to the first answer that fits the framework.
72–75% on ATI is solid — most sources put the safe zone at 65%+ so you're above that. For priority questions, the ABC/Maslow framework is right but you have to apply it strictly. If any answer involves airway or breathing, that wins unless it's already being actively managed.