Drug information storage and retrieval systems MCQs With Answer provide B. Pharm students an essential way to master pharmacy informatics, drug databases, indexing, retrieval algorithms, and clinical decision support. This concise, focused collection reviews database design, controlled vocabularies (MeSH, RxNorm), classification systems (ATC), pharmacovigilance repositories, data standards (HL7), search strategies, Boolean logic, and privacy safeguards. Emphasis on practical retrieval, accuracy metrics (precision/recall), and secure storage helps students apply theory in clinical and regulatory settings. Each question reinforces key concepts like drug compendia, interaction checking, and evidence-based querying to build retrieval skills and critical thinking. ‘Now let’s test your knowledge with 30 MCQs on this topic.’
Q1. What is the primary purpose of drug information storage and retrieval systems?
- To store drug data only
- To retrieve drug information only
- To support clinical decision-making and regulatory reporting
- All of the above
Correct Answer: All of the above
Q2. Which controlled vocabulary is specifically designed to normalize drug names and identifiers?
- MeSH
- SNOMED CT
- RxNorm
- ICD-10
Correct Answer: RxNorm
Q3. Which indexing technique is most commonly used for fast full-text search in drug information systems?
- B-Tree index
- Inverted index
- Hash index
- Bitmap index
Correct Answer: Inverted index
Q4. Which Boolean operator will broaden a search to include records containing either of two terms?
- AND
- OR
- NOT
- NEAR
Correct Answer: OR
Q5. Which controlled vocabulary is primarily used to index biomedical literature in PubMed?
- RxNorm
- MeSH
- ATC
- LOINC
Correct Answer: MeSH
Q6. What is the main purpose of the ATC classification system?
- To classify adverse drug reactions
- To classify drugs by chemical structure, therapeutic use, and organ system
- To provide dosing guidelines
- To list proprietary brand names only
Correct Answer: To classify drugs by chemical structure, therapeutic use, and organ system
Q7. Which global database is maintained by the WHO for pharmacovigilance reports?
- VigiBase
- FAERS
- PubChem
- ClinicalTrials.gov
Correct Answer: VigiBase
Q8. Drug interaction checking and dose alerts in electronic prescribing are examples of which system component?
- Database indexing
- Clinical decision support
- Data encryption
- Data archiving
Correct Answer: Clinical decision support
Q9. Which reference is best known as a comprehensive international drug compendium with monographs?
- Martindale
- Remington
- Harrison’s
- Gray’s Anatomy
Correct Answer: Martindale
Q10. Which security principle is primarily addressed by encrypting drug information at rest and in transit?
- Availability
- Integrity
- Confidentiality
- Auditability
Correct Answer: Confidentiality
Q11. For handling large volumes of semi-structured drug interaction logs, which database type is most appropriate?
- Relational SQL database
- NoSQL document store
- Flat-file system
- Spreadsheet
Correct Answer: NoSQL document store
Q12. Which search technique helps retrieve records despite spelling errors or variant drug name spellings?
- Exact match search
- Fuzzy search
- Range query
- Regular expression excluding typos
Correct Answer: Fuzzy search
Q13. MeSH organizes terms using what type of structure to support hierarchical searching?
- Flat list
- Network graph without hierarchy
- Hierarchical tree structure
- Randomized index
Correct Answer: Hierarchical tree structure
Q14. RxNorm provides normalized names and unique identifiers for which elements?
- Clinical drugs and ingredients
- Laboratory tests
- Medical imaging modalities
- Hospital departments
Correct Answer: Clinical drugs and ingredients
Q15. Which information retrieval model represents documents and queries as vectors and uses cosine similarity for ranking?
- Boolean model
- Probabilistic model
- Vector space model
- Latent Dirichlet Allocation
Correct Answer: Vector space model
Q16. In retrieval evaluation, what does precision measure?
- The proportion of relevant documents retrieved out of all relevant documents
- The proportion of retrieved documents that are relevant
- The time taken to retrieve results
- The size of the index
Correct Answer: The proportion of retrieved documents that are relevant
Q17. Which is an example of a primary source used when populating a drug information database?
- Systematic review
- Drug manufacturer package insert and original clinical trial report
- Textbook summary
- Editorial commentary
Correct Answer: Drug manufacturer package insert and original clinical trial report
Q18. Which standard is widely used for exchanging clinical and administrative healthcare data between systems?
- HTML
- FHIR/HL7
- SMTP
- IEEE 802.11
Correct Answer: FHIR/HL7
Q19. Which backup strategy stores only data changed since the last backup to save time and space?
- Full backup
- Incremental backup
- Mirror backup
- Cold backup
Correct Answer: Incremental backup
Q20. What is the national pharmacovigilance program in India called?
- FDA Safety Program
- Pharmacovigilance Programme of India (PvPI)
- EMA Signal Network
- VigiBase India
Correct Answer: Pharmacovigilance Programme of India (PvPI)
Q21. Which weighting scheme combines term frequency with inverse document frequency to rank search results?
- BM25
- TF-IDF
- PageRank
- Levenshtein distance
Correct Answer: TF-IDF
Q22. Which severity category typically indicates a life-threatening drug-drug interaction requiring immediate action?
- Minor
- Moderate
- Major/Severe
- Informational
Correct Answer: Major/Severe
Q23. Which technology is commonly used to convert printed drug monographs into searchable electronic text?
- Optical Character Recognition (OCR)
- Natural language generation
- Barcode scanning
- Bluetooth transfer
Correct Answer: Optical Character Recognition (OCR)
Q24. Which of the following is an example of structured data in a drug information system?
- Free-text patient notes
- Drug name and dose stored in separate database fields
- Scanned handwritten prescription images
- PDF of a research article
Correct Answer: Drug name and dose stored in separate database fields
Q25. What is the advantage of using “hot” storage for drug interaction caches?
- Lower cost per gigabyte
- Faster, immediate access to frequently used data
- Long-term archival durability
- Better physical security
Correct Answer: Faster, immediate access to frequently used data
Q26. Which technique helps resolve different brand and generic names to a single standard term?
- Stemming
- Synonym mapping and normalization
- Case-sensitive matching
- Noise word removal
Correct Answer: Synonym mapping and normalization
Q27. Which of the following is NOT a desirable feature of a robust drug information retrieval system?
- Interoperability with other clinical systems
- Real-time updates for safety alerts
- Transparent provenance and sources
- Single-vendor proprietary lock-in without standard interfaces
Correct Answer: Single-vendor proprietary lock-in without standard interfaces
Q28. What is query expansion using ontology or thesaurus designed to achieve in drug searches?
- Reduce the number of results always
- Enable semantic expansion by adding synonyms and related terms
- Enforce exact phrase matching only
- Remove all abbreviations
Correct Answer: Enable semantic expansion by adding synonyms and related terms
Q29. The interdisciplinary field that combines pharmacy practice with information technology to improve medication use is called what?
- Clinical pharmacology
- Pharmacy informatics
- Biostatistics
- Medicinal chemistry
Correct Answer: Pharmacy informatics
Q30. Which practice is essential to protect patient privacy and control access to sensitive drug information in clinical systems?
- Using shared generic passwords
- Implementing role-based access controls and audit logs
- Printing all records for open filing
- Allowing anonymous public access
Correct Answer: Implementing role-based access controls and audit logs

I am a Registered Pharmacist under the Pharmacy Act, 1948, and the founder of PharmacyFreak.com. I hold a Bachelor of Pharmacy degree from Rungta College of Pharmaceutical Science and Research. With a strong academic foundation and practical knowledge, I am committed to providing accurate, easy-to-understand content to support pharmacy students and professionals. My aim is to make complex pharmaceutical concepts accessible and useful for real-world application.
Mail- Sachin@pharmacyfreak.com

