Failed PALS twice — what finally worked for my third attempt

by Megan P. 6 views3 replies
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Megan P.OP
May 27, 2026

I'm not proud to admit this but I failed PALS twice before finally passing last month. The first time I walked in way too confident — I'd done ACLS a couple years ago and figured it couldn't be that different. Wrong. The pediatric rhythms and weight-based dosing completely threw me off during the megacode stations. Second attempt I crammed the algorithms the night before like I was back in nursing school. Also wrong.

What actually worked the third time was giving myself three weeks and being really systematic about it. I used a PALS practice test every single morning before my shift — doing practice questions daily helped me recognize patterns instead of just memorizing charts. I also found a study guide that broke down the H's and T's specifically for peds, which I'd been glossing over before.

Curious if anyone else struggled with the respiratory distress vs. respiratory failure distinction? That tripped me up constantly. Also the shock algorithms — compensated vs. decompensated. Happy to share what finally clicked for me if anyone's prepping right now.

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Amanda H.
May 27, 2026
The respiratory distress/failure distinction got me too on my first attempt. What helped me was focusing on mental status changes — once the kid's getting altered, you've crossed into failure territory. Also, don't underestimate the BLS components. I spent 90% of my prep time on algorithms and barely practiced my infant compressions. The instructor flagged my hand position immediately during skills check. Definitely do hands-on practice, not just book review.
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David K.
May 28, 2026
Three weeks sounds about right. I passed on my first try but I gave myself a full month and honestly probably over-studied the pharmacology. The exam tips I found most useful were about the megacode scenarios specifically — they're testing your team leadership as much as your clinical knowledge. Practice calling out what you're seeing out loud, even when you're studying alone. Sounds weird but it builds the muscle memory for directing a code team.
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David K.
May 28, 2026
Just signed up for PALS next month and this thread is exactly what I needed. The weight-based dosing has me nervous — I work adult ICU and almost never do pediatric. Going to find a good practice test and start drilling those algorithms now rather than the week before. Thanks for being honest about failing, it's weirdly reassuring.

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