Beyond the Bedside: Fundamentals of Nursing for RN Students

Cassandra Grimaldi

Step into the world of professional nursing with this foundational mastery-focused podcast designed for nursing students preparing for practice and NCLEX success. Each episode breaks down the core concepts of Foundations of Nursing—from history and professional roles to cultural competence, vital signs, hygiene, and patient safety. Case studies retold in full, with analysis and teaching moments for real clinical insight.

  1. 11/29/2025

    Beyond the Bedside: Sensory Functioning

    In this episode of Beyond the Bedside, we break down Chapter 45: Sensory Functioning and turn a huge theory chapter into clinical sense you can actually use with real patients. We start with how sensing the world really works—stimulus, receptors, transmission, perception, and the reticular activating system—then connect that to levels of arousal, sensoristasis, adaptation, and states like confusion, delirium, dementia, stupor, and coma. From there, we dive into sensory deprivation, sensory overload, ICU psychosis, and sensory deficits using real case stories: Ori, the ventilated trauma patient who becomes confused in the ICU; Muriel Hao, who cannot rest because of constant beeping alarms; and Dolores and Anthony Pirolla, navigating macular degeneration, new hearing loss, and growing social isolation together. You will learn how development, culture, stress, chronic illness, meds, and aging shape sensory function, including presbycusis, cataracts, macular degeneration, diabetic neuropathy, and COVID-related smell and taste changes. We walk step-by-step through focused sensory assessment, priority nursing diagnoses, and high-yield interventions for patients with reduced vision, hearing, confusion, and unconsciousness, plus practical teaching tips to prevent sensory deprivation and overload in every setting. We also hit health literacy for hearing disorders, safety and home “sensory proofing” for older adults, and evidence-based tools like music therapy. You will finish with NCLEX-style questions and full rationales so you can recognize sensory problems quickly, protect your patients from injury and isolation, and create calmer, more healing environments at the bedside.

    48 min
  2. 11/29/2025

    Beyond the Bedside: Stress and Adaptation

    In this episode of Beyond the Bedside, we break down Chapter 43: Stress and Adaptation into clear, practical, NCLEX-ready language you can actually use with real patients and in your own life. We start with the core concepts of stress, stressors, adaptation, homeostasis, and allostasis, then walk through the Local Adaptation Syndrome and General Adaptation Syndrome so you can recognize alarm, resistance, and exhaustion at the bedside. From there, we link mind–body interaction to psychosomatic disorders and take a deep dive into anxiety—mild, moderate, severe, and panic—plus coping mechanisms and classic defense mechanisms you will see every shift. You’ll follow full stories like Mei Fu, the overwhelmed grad student with headaches and diarrhea; Joan Rogerrio, whose inflammatory bowel disease flares when she returns to work; Christopher Weiss, the nursing student in full fight-or-flight before critical care clinical; Eva Weber, the single mom drowning in chronic stress; Vernon Russell, living with stroke and chronic disease; and Charles Obedide, paralyzed and spiraling into severe anxiety and alcohol use. We connect these cases to long-term stress, caregiver burden, family stress, crisis and the SAFER-R crisis intervention model, as well as nurse-specific stressors, burnout, incivility, and resilience. Throughout the episode, you will practice applying the nursing process to stress and anxiety, learn concrete teaching points like relaxation and mindfulness techniques, and work through NCLEX-style questions with full rationales so you finish feeling confident about recognizing, explaining, and managing stress and adaptation—Beyond the Bedside.

    49 min
  3. 11/17/2025

    Beyond the Bedside: Middle and Older Adulthood

    In this episode of Beyond the Bedside, we unpack Chapter 24: Middle and Older Adulthood and turn a huge gerontology chapter into NCLEX-ready, bedside-focused clarity. We start with the big “why” of aging using genetic, immunity, neuroendocrine, wear-and-tear, cross-linkage, and free radical theories so you can explain normal changes without labeling every symptom as “just old age.” From there, we walk through middle adulthood—using Erikson, Havighurst, Levinson, and Gould—to decode menopause, andropause, career shifts, the sandwich generation, caregiver fatigue, and changing sexuality in real people like Rosemary and Larry. Then we dive into older adulthood with a focus on functional health, sarcopenia, and sarcopenic obesity, tying normal physiologic changes to safety, meds, nutrition, and mobility instead of memorizing organ lists in a vacuum. You’ll hear how issues like polypharmacy, chronic illness, falls and fragility fractures, SPICES red flags, immunosenescence, social isolation, structural racism, and elder abuse actually show up in patients like Ethel, who insists on living alone with early dementia and three cats, and Josephine, who is adapting to life in a skilled nursing facility after a venous stasis ulcer. We differentiate dementia, delirium, and depression with practical assessment tips, talk driving and role loss, map housing options from aging in place to assisted living and long-term care, and show you how reminiscence, life review, and family-focused care support Erikson’s ego integrity instead of despair. We close by walking through the chapter’s NCLEX-style questions and rationales so you can practice spotting ageism, identifying normal versus pathological aging, prioritizing fall and medication safety, and choosing the nursing actions that best protect dignity, independence, and quality of life from midlife through the oldest-old.

    50 min
  4. 11/17/2025

    Beyond the Bedside: Conception Through Young Adulthood

    In this episode of Beyond the Bedside, we unpack Chapter 23: Conception Through Young Adulthood and turn a massive lifespan chapter into NCLEX-ready, bedside-focused clarity. We start at conception and walk through fetal, preterm, and low–birth-weight risks, then move into neonatal priorities like Apgar scoring, respiratory transition, temperature regulation, and the impact of maternal smoking, alcohol, and drugs on long-term neurodevelopment. From there, we break down infancy, toddler, preschool, school-age, and adolescent stages using Piaget, Erikson, Freud, and Havighurst so you always know what’s normal, what’s a red flag, and how to adjust your assessment, safety planning, and teaching for each age. You’ll hear how issues like colic, failure to thrive, SIDS and SUID, child maltreatment, obesity, ADHD, learning disorders, enuresis, substance use, STIs, and teen pregnancy actually show up in real patients—like Darlene, the pregnant 14-year-old; Nate, the 11-year-old with a concussion; Hillarie, the toddler with suspicious injuries; Luke with colic and an overwhelmed mom; and Christopher, the 18-year-old with cystic fibrosis. We tie in mandatory reporting, Safe to Sleep guidelines, choking response, car seat and water safety, immunization counseling, media and social media risks, and inclusive conversations around sexuality and gender so you can advocate confidently for vulnerable kids and teens. We close by walking through the chapter’s NCLEX-style questions and rationales so you can immediately practice identifying developmental stage, prioritizing safety and teaching, and choosing the nursing action that best protects growth, mental health, and family well-being from birth all the way through young adulthood.

    48 min
  5. 11/17/2025

    Beyond the Bedside: Developmental Concepts

    In this episode of Beyond the Bedside, we break down Chapter 22: Developmental Concepts into clear, NCLEX-focused language you can actually use at the bedside. We start with the core foundations of growth and development, including cephalocaudal and proximodistal trends, differentiation and integration, and the roles of genetics, genomics, heredity, and epigenetics in shaping health across the lifespan. From there, we layer on environmental, nutritional, prenatal, individual, and caregiver factors, tying in social determinants of health and social epigenomics so you can see why two children with the same diagnosis may develop very differently. You’ll get a guided tour through the classic developmental theorists—Freud’s psychosexual stages, Piaget’s cognitive stages, Erikson’s psychosocial crises, Havighurst’s developmental tasks, Gould’s adult transformations, Levinson’s life structure phases, Kohlberg’s moral levels, Gilligan’s ethic of care, and Fowler’s faith development—always linked back to real patients like Melanie and her 12-month-old, Juan with encephalitis and language barriers, and Joseph struggling with dependence after a hip fracture. We connect each theory directly to nursing assessment, anticipatory guidance, safety, patient teaching, and culturally sensitive communication, using QSEN reflection questions to practice advocating for vulnerable patients like Juan when language and power dynamics get in the way. We finish by showing you how to apply Box 22-4’s practical guidelines to plan developmentally appropriate care across the lifespan, integrate family dynamics, and collaborate with the interprofessional team, then close with NCLEX-style questions and rationales so you can walk into exams and clinicals confident in recognizing where your patient is developmentally and what that means for safe, holistic nursing care.

    48 min
  6. 11/17/2025

    Beyond the Bedside: Loss, Grief, & Dying

    In this episode of Beyond the Bedside, we break down Chapter 44: Loss, Grief, and Dying into real-world, NCLEX-focused language. We start with the core concepts of loss and grief—actual, perceived, maturational, situational, and anticipatory loss—then connect them to normal and dysfunctional grief using Engel’s stages and Kübler-Ross’s five reactions of dying. From there, we walk through how to recognize grief in the body, emotions, social life, and spiritual life, and how age, family roles, culture, religion, socioeconomic status, and cause of death shape each person’s response. You’ll learn the current definitions of death, the classic signs of impending death, and what a “good death” looks like in practice, then move into palliative care and hospice, including how and when to think about referrals. We unpack advance care planning with living wills, durable power of attorney, advance directives, POLST and MOLST forms, plus Do-Not-Resuscitate and Allow Natural Death orders, comfort measures only plans, terminal weaning, voluntary stopping of eating and drinking, assisted suicide, active and passive euthanasia, and palliative sedation within the ANA Code of Ethics. Using case stories like Yvonne and her premature infant, Mr. Perez at his wife’s bedside, Ms. Giordano’s advance directive conflict, and the evolving Esposita family scenario, you’ll practice clinical judgment around communication, family coping, organ donation, autopsy decisions, suicide risk, and nurse moral distress. We finish by walking the full nursing process for grieving and dying patients and their families, including assessment questions, priority diagnoses, teaching, interdisciplinary collaboration, nurse self-care, and step-by-step postmortem care, then close with NCLEX-style questions and rationales so you can walk into exams and clinicals confident providing safe, compassionate end-of-life care.

    37 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.2
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

Step into the world of professional nursing with this foundational mastery-focused podcast designed for nursing students preparing for practice and NCLEX success. Each episode breaks down the core concepts of Foundations of Nursing—from history and professional roles to cultural competence, vital signs, hygiene, and patient safety. Case studies retold in full, with analysis and teaching moments for real clinical insight.

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