NGN NCLEX-RN Clinical Judgment

Return to nursing with confidence, not confusion.

Built for nurses returning after a gap — or those who want to sharpen clinical judgment fast. AI-powered NGN case studies, step by step, at your own pace.

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NurseIQ Coach
NGN Clinical Judgment
Case: Medical Unit
Mr. Chen, 68M, post-op day 2 hip replacement. RR 24, SpO₂ 91%, restless, BP 88/54. He was fine 30 mins ago.
Step 1 — Recognize Cues
A. He is probably just anxious
B. SpO₂ drop + hypotension = urgent concern ✓
C. Post-op vitals are always unstable
✦ NCLEX Logic Built-in
4Clinical Judgment Steps
NGN Case Studies
24/7Practice Anytime
NCLEXLogic-First Approach
The Framework

Four steps to clinical mastery

Every case walks you through the exact NCLEX NGN clinical judgment model — the same framework tested on today's NCLEX-RN.

1
👁️

Recognize Cues

Learn to identify which patient data is relevant — vitals, labs, history — and what is a red flag vs normal variation.

2
🧠

Analyze Hypotheses

Form clinical hypotheses. What's likely happening? What could be ruled out? Practice differential thinking with NCLEX logic.

3

Priority Actions

Master ABCs, safety-first, and least-invasive principles. Know exactly what to do first — and why other options are unsafe.

4
📊

Evaluate Outcomes

Review what a good outcome looks like. Learn to reassess and adjust your care plan based on patient response.

Coaching that actually explains the why

Every answer — right or wrong — is explained with NCLEX reasoning, not just a grade.

  • 📋
    Realistic Case Scenarios Medical, surgical, peds, OB, psych — variety across all NCLEX domains.
  • 💬
    Conversational Coaching Not a quiz app. NurseIQ talks you through each case like a mentor would.
  • 🛡️
    Safe & Fictional Data All patients are fictional. No real clinical data is ever used or stored.
NurseIQ Coach
NurseIQ
🩺 New Case: ICU Night Shift

Mrs. Rivera, 72F, admitted for sepsis. Current vitals: BP 78/46, HR 128, RR 26, Temp 39.8°C, SpO₂ 93% on 4L NC. Her MAP is 52. She's confused and not making much urine. What cues stand out to you?
You
BP is dangerously low and she's confused. MAP under 65 is bad.
NurseIQ
✅ Exactly right! MAP < 65 indicates inadequate tissue perfusion — a key sign of septic shock. The confusion (altered LOC), low urine output, tachycardia, and hyperthermia all confirm this is a sepsis emergency.

👉 Step 2: What's your priority hypothesis?
Simple Pricing

Invest in your comeback

No hidden fees. Cancel anytime. Pick the plan that fits your study timeline.

Monthly
$20
per month
  • Unlimited NGN case studies
  • All 4 clinical judgment steps
  • NCLEX logic explanations
  • All clinical domains
  • Cancel anytime
Annual
$150
billed yearly
Save $30 vs monthly
  • Everything in 6 Months
  • Dedicated support
  • Early access to new features
  • Downloadable study summaries
  • Best long-term value

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