Access to HE Midwifery — The Study Podcast · Module 4, Lesson 1 · 9:25

Using a Calculator and Checking Answers in Midwifery

With Emma and James, Numeracy Specialist

Key Takeaways

  • A calculator is a tool, not a substitute for understanding.
  • You still need to set up the calculation correctly, enter the values in the right order, and crucially — evaluate whether the answer makes sense.
  • Entering values accurately, understanding order of operations — which calculation happens first — and using the memory function for multi-step problems.
  • And always working in consistent units before you start.
  • If a woman needs 40 units of Syntocinon in 500ml over four hours, you need to know the rate per hour.

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Full Transcript

Emma: Welcome to Using a Calculator and Checking Answers in Midwifery. I'm Emma, and with me is James, our Numeracy Specialist. James, calculators are everywhere now — but there's clearly still a skill involved in using one well?

James: Absolutely. A calculator is a tool, not a substitute for understanding. You still need to set up the calculation correctly, enter the values in the right order, and crucially — evaluate whether the answer makes sense.

Emma: What are the most important calculator skills for midwifery students to develop?

James: Entering values accurately, understanding order of operations — which calculation happens first — and using the memory function for multi-step problems. And always working in consistent units before you start.

Emma: Can you walk through a typical midwifery calculation that a student might need a calculator for?

What should learners understand about using a calculator and checking answers in midwifery?

James: Infusion rate calculations. If a woman needs 40 units of Syntocinon in 500ml over four hours, you need to know the rate per hour. That's 500 divided by 4, giving 125ml per hour. Simple with a calculator, but you still need to understand the logic.

Emma: What about checking answers — what strategies exist beyond just redoing the calculation?

James: Estimation is powerful. Round numbers to get a rough expected answer first. If your estimate is 2ml and your calculated answer is 20ml, something is wrong. That sense of plausibility is a clinical safety skill.

Emma: The double-checking principle in clinical practice goes beyond the individual. How does that work in maternity settings?

James: High-risk drugs like oxytocin and opioids require two qualified practitioners to independently calculate and check the dose before administration. The second checker doesn't just confirm — they calculate from scratch independently.

How does using a calculator and checking answers in midwifery work in a healthcare context?

Emma: What are the common calculator errors students make that lead to wrong answers?

James: Forgetting to convert units first is the biggest one. Also misreading the display — confusing a zero for a decimal point. And not accounting for the right sequence of operations in a compound calculation.

Emma: Are there useful estimation techniques for checking drug doses mentally?

James: Yes — for simple doses, rounding to the nearest easy number and dividing gives a quick sanity check. If a calculated dose would require drawing up more than a full 10ml syringe and that seems wrong, trust that instinct and recheck.

Emma: Technology in clinical settings is expanding — devices that auto-calculate infusion rates and so on. Does that reduce the need for this skill?

How does using a calculator and checking answers in midwifery work in a healthcare context?

James: It changes the risk profile but doesn't eliminate it. Programme a pump with the wrong rate and it will faithfully deliver the wrong dose. The calculation skill underpins your ability to detect and correct those errors.

Emma: James, for students who want to get really solid at clinical numeracy — what's your recommended practice approach?

James: Work through practice calculations daily, time yourself, and always verify your answers. Use past assessment questions and drug calculation workbooks designed for pre-registration nursing and midwifery. The more repetition in realistic scenarios, the more confident you'll become.

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