Fundamentals of Pharmacology. Группа авторов

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issues related to chapter content. The Skills in Practice feature offers a ‘how to do …’ component. The Episodes of Care feature uses a case study approach, linked to chapter content that can occur in any care setting. Some chapters feature a glossary of terms and a further reading list is provided at the end of every chapter to encourage you to delve deeper.

      As a healthcare student, your learning is not about rote learning and being able to remember. It is more than this: it is about applying that learning to the various situations you will find yourself in, ensuring that the patient, the person you have been given the privilege to offer care and support to, is at the heart of all you do. The goal should be to take your learning further, to develop, to discover and be curious. In this text you will learn and develop your own strategies that will help guide you so as to shape the way you study and learn, changing the way you think as you become a life‐long learner with a myriad of transferable skills.

      Life‐long learning means just that: the continual pursuit of more knowledge as you develop personally and professionally; learning does not stop once you have graduated and had your name entered on to the professional register. Information and the acquisition of information does not stand still, new information is always being generated and applied in the nursing and medical fields. In the area of pharmacology, there are always new drugs being discovered and developed.

      1 Nursing and Midwifery Council (2018a). Future nurse: the standards of proficiency for registered nurses. www.nmc.org.uk/globalassets/sitedocuments/education‐standards/future‐nurse‐proficiencies.pdf (accessed September 2019).

      2 Nursing and Midwifery Council (2018b). The standards of proficiency for nursing associates. www.nmc.org.uk/globalassets/sitedocuments/education‐standards/nursing‐associates‐proficiency‐standards.pdf (accessed September 2019).

      3 Nursing and Midwifery Council (2018c). The Code. Professional standards of practice and behaviour for nurses, midwives and nursing associates. www.nmc.org.uk/globalassets/sitedocuments/nmc‐publications/nmc‐code.pdf (accessed September 2019).

      4 Prydderch, S. (2019). Preparing pre‐registration nurses to be ‘prescriber ready’. Aspirational or achievable reality. Nurse Education Today. doi: 10.1016/j.nedt.2019.03.009.

      5 Royal Pharmaceutical Society and the Royal College of Nursing (2019). Professional guidance on the administration of medicines in healthcare settings. https://www.rpharms.com/Portals/0/RPS%20document%20library/Open%20access/Professional%20standards/SSHM%20and%20Admin/Admin%20of%20Meds%20prof%20guidance.pdf?ver=2019‐01‐23‐145026‐567 (accessed September 2019).

      Acknowledgements

      Ian would like to thank his partner Jussi Lahtinen for his ongoing support and Mrs. Frances Cohen for her help and encouragement. Thanks also to Magenta Styles at Wiley for her inspiration.

      Barry would like to thank Professor Ian Peate for his continued encouragement support and friendship helping me to grow as an academic, an editor, a writer and for always believing in me. I would also like to thank my partner Jose, my mum Tina, Dad Ray and Sisters Melanie and Sonia for being my family. I would like to thank all of the contributory writers who have written book chapters. Working and dedicating your own time to writing for publication is no easy task. I applaud your dedication and thank you on behalf on the readership. Finally, I would like to thank Wiley and the team working behind the scenes for their continuous support on all aspects of the publication process.

      Prefixes and suffixes

      Prefix: A prefix is positioned at the beginning of a word to modify or change its meaning. Pre means ‘before‘. Prefixes may also indicate a location, number or time.

      Suffix: The ending part of a word that changes the meaning of the word.

Prefix or suffix Meaning Example(s)
a‐, an‐ not, without analgesic, apathy
ab‐ from; away from abduction
abdomin(o)‐ of or relating to the abdomen abdomen
acous(io)‐ of or relating to hearing acoumeter, acoustician
acr(o)‐ extremity, topmost acrocrany, acromegaly, acroosteolysis, acroposthia
ad‐ at, increase, on, toward adduction
aden(o)‐, aden(i)‐ of or relating to a gland adenocarcinoma, adenology, adenotome, adenotyphus
adip(o)‐ of or relating to fat or fatty tissue adipocyte
adren(o)‐ of or relating to adrenal glands adrenal artery
‐aemia blood condition anaemia
aer(o)‐ air, gas aerosinusitis
‐aesthesi(o)‐ sensation anaesthesia
alb‐ denoting a white or pale color albino
‐alge(si)‐ pain analgesic
‐algia, ‐alg(i)o‐ pain myalgia
all(o‐) denoting something as different, or as an addition alloantigen,

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