Primary, secondary and tertiary hospitals – differences and organization MCQs With Answer

Introduction: Primary, secondary and tertiary hospitals form the three-tier healthcare delivery system that shapes patient care, referral pathways, resource allocation and pharmacy services. For B.Pharm students, understanding differences in scope, infrastructure, clinical services, diagnostic capacity, staffing and medication management is essential. Primary hospitals focus on basic outpatient care, preventive services and essential medicines; secondary hospitals provide inpatient care, basic surgery and specialist consultations; tertiary hospitals deliver advanced diagnostics, intensive care, super-specialty treatment and complex pharmacotherapy. Key concepts include referral systems, formulary management, clinical pharmacy roles, sterile compounding and medication safety across levels. Now let’s test your knowledge with 30 MCQs on this topic.

Q1. What is the primary role of a primary-level hospital in a three-tier system?

  • Provide complex surgical and super-specialty care
  • Deliver basic outpatient care, preventive services and essential medicines
  • Provide nationwide policy and regulation
  • Conduct advanced clinical research and postgraduate teaching

Correct Answer: Deliver basic outpatient care, preventive services and essential medicines

Q2. Which facility is most likely to offer intensive care units (ICUs) and specialized units?

  • Primary hospital
  • Secondary hospital
  • Tertiary hospital
  • Community health post

Correct Answer: Tertiary hospital

Q3. In the referral pathway, a patient with an uncomplicated cold should generally be seen at:

  • Tertiary hospital emergency department
  • Secondary-level surgical ward
  • Primary care facility
  • National referral center

Correct Answer: Primary care facility

Q4. Which hospital level typically manages a district-level general hospital with basic surgery and inpatient wards?

  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary
  • Quaternary

Correct Answer: Secondary

Q5. Which of the following pharmacy services is most commonly centralized in tertiary hospitals?

  • Basic dispensing of essential oral drugs only
  • Advanced sterile compounding, parenteral nutrition and TDM
  • Outreach immunization only
  • Community over-the-counter sales

Correct Answer: Advanced sterile compounding, parenteral nutrition and TDM

Q6. What is a defining organizational feature of secondary hospitals compared to primary hospitals?

  • No inpatient beds
  • Availability of specialist consultations and basic inpatient care
  • Exclusive focus on public health campaigns
  • Only outpatient dental services

Correct Answer: Availability of specialist consultations and basic inpatient care

Q7. Which level of hospital is most involved in undergraduate and postgraduate medical education and extensive clinical research?

  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary
  • Mobile clinic

Correct Answer: Tertiary

Q8. For hospital formulary decisions and therapeutic guidelines, which level usually has the most comprehensive formulary committee?

  • Secondary hospital with limited committee
  • Tertiary hospital with multidisciplinary formulary committee
  • Pharmacy retail chain

Correct Answer: Tertiary hospital with multidisciplinary formulary committee

Q9. Which type of diagnostic services are typically available at a secondary hospital?

  • Basic laboratory tests, X-ray and ultrasound
  • Functional MRI and advanced nuclear medicine
  • Only rapid diagnostic tests with no imaging
  • None; diagnostics are only at primary level

Correct Answer: Basic laboratory tests, X-ray and ultrasound

Q10. Which staffing pattern is characteristic of tertiary hospitals?

  • Only general practitioners and community nurses
  • Specialists, sub-specialists, research faculty and multidisciplinary teams
  • Volunteer staff with no specialists
  • Pharmacists only in outpatient booths

Correct Answer: Specialists, sub-specialists, research faculty and multidisciplinary teams

Q11. Which hospital level is most likely responsible for routine immunization campaigns and community health outreach?

  • Tertiary hospitals
  • Primary hospitals and health centers
  • Super-specialty centers only
  • Private specialty clinics only

Correct Answer: Primary hospitals and health centers

Q12. Which function best describes the role of clinical pharmacists in tertiary hospitals?

  • Only counting and dispensing tablets
  • Providing medication therapy management, pharmacokinetic monitoring and rounds participation
  • Managing hospital catering
  • Maintaining patient appointments only

Correct Answer: Providing medication therapy management, pharmacokinetic monitoring and rounds participation

Q13. Which hospital level typically manages emergency care for life-threatening conditions before referral?

  • Primary facility with stabilization and transfer
  • Secondary with no emergency services
  • Tertiary only receives but does not stabilize patients
  • None; emergencies are managed only in outpatient pharmacies

Correct Answer: Primary facility with stabilization and transfer

Q14. In terms of medication availability, which statement is true?

  • Primary hospitals stock the widest range of specialty biologics
  • Secondary hospitals rarely hold any injectable medications
  • Tertiary hospitals maintain extensive specialty drug inventories and cold-chain biologics
  • All hospital levels have identical inventories

Correct Answer: Tertiary hospitals maintain extensive specialty drug inventories and cold-chain biologics

Q15. Which organizational element ensures seamless patient transfer between levels of care?

  • Random patient admission
  • Structured referral and counter-referral system with communication protocols
  • Patients choosing any facility without records
  • Only informal telephone calls with no documentation

Correct Answer: Structured referral and counter-referral system with communication protocols

Q16. Which quality and safety mechanism is commonly implemented across all hospital levels but more developed in tertiary centers?

  • Adverse drug reaction (ADR) reporting and pharmacovigilance
  • No recordkeeping of medications
  • Only verbal medication orders
  • Unregulated compounding

Correct Answer: Adverse drug reaction (ADR) reporting and pharmacovigilance

Q17. Which hospital level is most likely to maintain a blood bank and advanced transfusion services?

  • Primary health post
  • Secondary hospital
  • Tertiary hospital
  • Community pharmacy

Correct Answer: Tertiary hospital

Q18. For formulary restriction of high-cost oncology drugs, which committee typically enforces policies?

  • Primary clinic nurse team
  • Hospital Pharmacy and Therapeutics (P&T) committee at secondary or tertiary level
  • Pharmaceutical sales representatives
  • Local retail store manager

Correct Answer: Hospital Pharmacy and Therapeutics (P&T) committee at secondary or tertiary level

Q19. Which of the following is a typical service gap at many primary hospitals compared to tertiary hospitals?

  • Basic immunizations
  • Minor wound care
  • Advanced molecular diagnostics and genetic testing
  • Pregnancy antenatal screening

Correct Answer: Advanced molecular diagnostics and genetic testing

Q20. Which hospital level most commonly provides inpatient obstetric care including cesarean sections?

  • Primary health post only for referrals
  • Secondary hospitals and some tertiary centers
  • Tertiary centers never provide obstetric care
  • Retail pharmacies

Correct Answer: Secondary hospitals and some tertiary centers

Q21. Which workforce role is essential in all hospital levels for safe medication dispensing and inventory control?

  • Clinical research scientist only at tertiary level
  • Qualified hospital pharmacist
  • Hospital receptionist only
  • Biomedical engineer only

Correct Answer: Qualified hospital pharmacist

Q22. Which metric is commonly used to evaluate capacity differences between secondary and tertiary hospitals?

  • Number of parking spaces
  • Bed strength, specialist availability and range of services
  • Number of vending machines
  • Proximity to shopping centers

Correct Answer: Bed strength, specialist availability and range of services

Q23. Where is therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) most likely to be routinely available?

  • Primary health center
  • Tertiary hospital with clinical pharmacology support
  • Community health worker kiosk
  • Local grocery store

Correct Answer: Tertiary hospital with clinical pharmacology support

Q24. What is the ideal role of a secondary hospital in a public health emergency?

  • Function as a referral hub for stabilization and moderate-level care
  • Ignore mass casualty and refer everyone to tertiary centers only
  • Only provide administrative paperwork
  • Close down and transfer all patients to community clinics

Correct Answer: Function as a referral hub for stabilization and moderate-level care

Q25. In terms of drug procurement and supply chain, which level usually manages bulk purchasing for specialized medicines?

  • Primary clinics handling large biologic procurement
  • Tertiary hospitals or regional procurement units
  • Individual prescribers buying directly
  • Patient-managed procurement only

Correct Answer: Tertiary hospitals or regional procurement units

Q26. Which hospital level most commonly implements antimicrobial stewardship programs with formal oversight?

  • Primary health post with no oversight
  • Secondary and especially tertiary hospitals with multidisciplinary teams
  • Retail pharmacies only
  • Medical supply warehouses

Correct Answer: Secondary and especially tertiary hospitals with multidisciplinary teams

Q27. Which statement about emergency referral from primary to tertiary level is correct?

  • Primary facilities should never refer patients
  • Primary should stabilize, provide initial treatment, and refer via established pathway
  • Tertiary centers accept patients without any transfer documentation
  • Patients should be sent directly to foreign hospitals

Correct Answer: Primary should stabilize, provide initial treatment, and refer via established pathway

Q28. For B.Pharm students, which competency is most important when working across hospital levels?

  • Understanding formulary management, dispensing practices and clinical pharmacy across levels
  • Only memorizing drug prices
  • Focusing exclusively on retail sales tactics
  • Avoiding interaction with clinical teams

Correct Answer: Understanding formulary management, dispensing practices and clinical pharmacy across levels

Q29. Which infrastructure element differentiates tertiary hospitals from lower levels?

  • Basic outpatient counters
  • Advanced operating theaters, catheterization labs and specialized imaging suites
  • Only wooden benches for waiting
  • Informal treatment areas without documentation

Correct Answer: Advanced operating theaters, catheterization labs and specialized imaging suites

Q30. Which of the following best summarizes medication safety priorities across all hospital levels?

  • Ignore ADRs and focus on sales
  • Implement safe prescribing, proper storage, cold chain, ADR reporting and rational use of medicines
  • Allow any unlicensed dispensing practices
  • Eliminate pharmacist involvement in medication review

Correct Answer: Implement safe prescribing, proper storage, cold chain, ADR reporting and rational use of medicines

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