PALS recertification — tips for the pediatric advanced life support exam?
I'm a pediatric nurse coming up on my PALS renewal and I want to go in more prepared than I was for my initial certification 2 years ago. The first time I crammed the night before and barely passed the written portion — I was relying on my clinical experience and it wasn't quite enough for some of the algorithm questions.
The systematic approach to pediatric assessment — the primary and secondary surveys — I do every shift. Where I always get tripped up is the specific drug dosages and the rhythm recognition questions for the less common arrhythmias.
For recertification, is the written portion the same depth as initial certification or is it lighter?
Drug dosing is a weight-based calculation problem in most scenarios. Practice doing the math quickly under pressure — epinephrine and atropine dosing for pediatric patients especially. Being automatic with those calculations frees up cognitive load for the algorithm decisions.
The systematic approach you use daily is your biggest asset. PALS tests structured thinking as much as specific knowledge — candidates who work through the algorithms methodically tend to outperform those who try to jump to answers based on pattern recognition alone.
Recertification is generally the same written content depth — they don't distinguish between initial and renewal candidates on the knowledge test. The difference is you have 2 years of pediatric nursing experience behind you now, which helps more than you might expect.
For arrhythmia recognition, SVT vs. sinus tachycardia in a sick kid is the distinction that comes up most. The algorithm decision depends on whether the patient is stable or unstable — make sure your rhythm recognition connects directly to the treatment pathway.