Medication management and safety are fundamental aspects of pharmacy practice, playing a critical role in preventing errors and improving therapeutic outcomes. Pharm.D. students must be proficient in applying safety principles, managing drug regimens, counseling patients, and utilizing error-reporting systems. This quiz covers essential topics such as the Pharmacists’ Patient Care Process (PPCP), types of medication errors, high-alert drugs, and best practices for safe medication use across healthcare settings.
1. Which of the following best defines medication management?
- A. Dispensing the most expensive medication
- B. Prescribing medications based on patient demand
- C. Ensuring appropriate selection, dosing, and monitoring of medications
- D. Reducing patient visits
Correct answer: C. Ensuring appropriate selection, dosing, and monitoring of medications
2. What is a sentinel event in healthcare?
- A. A drug with low adherence rates
- B. A preventable error causing patient death or serious harm
- C. An insurance billing mistake
- D. A skipped dose of medication
Correct answer: B. A preventable error causing patient death or serious harm
3. The “Five Rights” of medication administration include:
- A. Drug, dose, device, day, and doctor
- B. Right patient, drug, dose, route, and time
- C. Right brand, label, box, expiration, and usage
- D. Strength, storage, nurse, code, and formula
Correct answer: B. Right patient, drug, dose, route, and time
4. Which of the following is a high-alert medication?
- A. Lisinopril
- B. Amoxicillin
- C. Insulin
- D. Diphenhydramine
Correct answer: C. Insulin
5. What type of error occurs when a drug is given at the wrong time but to the right patient and in the correct dose?
- A. Omission error
- B. Timing error
- C. Monitoring error
- D. Unauthorized drug error
Correct answer: B. Timing error
6. The primary goal of medication reconciliation is to:
- A. Add new medications to a patient’s profile
- B. Match medications with disease codes
- C. Prevent unintended discrepancies during care transitions
- D. Review insurance coverage
Correct answer: C. Prevent unintended discrepancies during care transitions
7. A common source of medication errors in electronic prescribing is:
- A. Manual counting
- B. Tall man lettering
- C. Drop-down selection errors
- D. Barcoding
Correct answer: C. Drop-down selection errors
8. The ISMP is best known for its work in:
- A. Drug pricing reform
- B. Pharmacokinetics education
- C. Medication error prevention and safety recommendations
- D. Pharmacy certification exams
Correct answer: C. Medication error prevention and safety recommendations
9. Which of the following would most help reduce look-alike/sound-alike (LASA) drug errors?
- A. Using handwritten labels
- B. Storing similar drugs side by side
- C. Using Tall Man lettering
- D. Removing expiration dates
Correct answer: C. Using Tall Man lettering
10. What is the best practice for documenting an adverse drug reaction (ADR)?
- A. Record only in verbal reports
- B. Skip documentation if mild
- C. Document in both patient chart and reporting system
- D. Wait until discharge
Correct answer: C. Document in both patient chart and reporting system
11. A root cause analysis (RCA) is typically performed:
- A. Before medication dispensing
- B. As a form of patient education
- C. After a serious medication error occurs
- D. During inventory audits
Correct answer: C. After a serious medication error occurs
12. Which of the following is an example of a prescribing error?
- A. Giving the wrong patient the right drug
- B. Writing an illegible prescription
- C. Administering a drug by IV instead of IM
- D. Failing to scan a barcode
Correct answer: B. Writing an illegible prescription
13. What is the purpose of a medication therapy management (MTM) session?
- A. Refill prescriptions
- B. Provide drug samples
- C. Optimize therapeutic outcomes through patient review and counseling
- D. Promote brand-name drugs
Correct answer: C. Optimize therapeutic outcomes through patient review and counseling
14. The Joint Commission requires medication reconciliation at:
- A. Prescription refill
- B. Every new medication added
- C. Every transition of care
- D. Yearly health checkups
Correct answer: C. Every transition of care
15. Barcoding in medication administration helps prevent errors by:
- A. Improving drug metabolism
- B. Detecting counterfeit drugs
- C. Ensuring the right drug is given to the right patient
- D. Measuring drug levels in blood
Correct answer: C. Ensuring the right drug is given to the right patient
16. Which tool is most commonly used to assess a hospital’s medication safety practices?
- A. BEERS Criteria
- B. ISMP Self-Assessment Tool
- C. DEA Form 222
- D. REMS Checklist
Correct answer: B. ISMP Self-Assessment Tool
17. An example of a dispensing error is:
- A. Writing a wrong prescription
- B. Administering the wrong route
- C. Giving a patient the incorrect medication from the pharmacy
- D. Omitting allergy status from chart
Correct answer: C. Giving a patient the incorrect medication from the pharmacy
18. A pharmacist notices an illegible dose on a prescription. The best response is to:
- A. Guess the most likely dose
- B. Dispense a standard adult dose
- C. Clarify with the prescriber before dispensing
- D. Cancel the prescription
Correct answer: C. Clarify with the prescriber before dispensing
19. What does the abbreviation REMS stand for?
- A. Reimbursed Emergency Management System
- B. Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy
- C. Required Endocrinology Monitoring Sheet
- D. Regulation for EMR Systems
Correct answer: B. Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy
20. An example of a monitoring error is:
- A. Failure to assess renal function in a patient on vancomycin
- B. Wrong drug dispensed
- C. Omitting patient allergies from label
- D. Incorrect sig code entry
Correct answer: A. Failure to assess renal function in a patient on vancomycin
21. Which factor increases the risk of medication errors in pediatric patients?
- A. Limited drug options
- B. Adult-only labeling
- C. Weight-based dosing calculations
- D. Drug resistance
Correct answer: C. Weight-based dosing calculations
22. Which of the following is most likely to reduce medication errors in community pharmacy?
- A. Rushed workflow
- B. Interruptions during verification
- C. Using barcode scanning and double checks
- D. Single-staff operation
Correct answer: C. Using barcode scanning and double checks
23. A near-miss event is:
- A. A medication event that causes harm
- B. An error caught before reaching the patient
- C. A resolved drug interaction
- D. A discontinued medication
Correct answer: B. An error caught before reaching the patient
24. Pharmacists play a key role in reducing polypharmacy by:
- A. Promoting supplements
- B. Initiating unnecessary therapy
- C. Regularly reviewing medications for appropriateness
- D. Referring all decisions to prescribers
Correct answer: C. Regularly reviewing medications for appropriateness
25. Which type of error involves an omitted dose due to stock shortage?
- A. Documentation error
- B. Transcription error
- C. Supply chain-related omission error
- D. ADR
Correct answer: C. Supply chain-related omission error
26. What is one strategy for preventing medication errors in long-term care?
- A. Limiting chart reviews
- B. Non-pharmacist verification
- C. Regular medication review and interdisciplinary communication
- D. Ignoring PRN orders
Correct answer: C. Regular medication review and interdisciplinary communication
27. The term “medication misadventure” refers to:
- A. Correct therapeutic response
- B. Any drug-related problem that interferes with desired outcomes
- C. Successful off-label use
- D. Minor side effects
Correct answer: B. Any drug-related problem that interferes with desired outcomes
28. A patient receiving two interacting medications without monitoring is at risk of:
- A. Therapeutic success
- B. Synergism
- C. Adverse drug event
- D. Resistance
Correct answer: C. Adverse drug event
29. Patient counseling is essential to prevent which type of error?
- A. Dispensing error
- B. Prescribing error
- C. Patient administration error
- D. Labeling error
Correct answer: C. Patient administration error
30. The “Swiss Cheese Model” of error prevention emphasizes:
- A. Eliminating drug choices
- B. Multiple system layers that may each have weaknesses
- C. A one-step verification system
- D. Physician-only accountability
Correct answer: B. Multiple system layers that may each have weaknesses
31. The best way to report a medication error anonymously is through:
- A. Social media
- B. FDA’s MedWatch or internal reporting systems
- C. Direct phone calls to the manufacturer
- D. Ignoring the error
Correct answer: B. FDA’s MedWatch or internal reporting systems
32. A black box warning is intended to:
- A. Indicate a generic product
- B. Warn against food-drug interactions
- C. Highlight serious or life-threatening risks
- D. Encourage OTC conversion
Correct answer: C. Highlight serious or life-threatening risks
33. In a pharmacy setting, the acronym “LASA” stands for:
- A. Licensed And Safe Agents
- B. Look-Alike Sound-Alike
- C. Labeling And Storage Assessment
- D. Legal And Structural Alerts
Correct answer: B. Look-Alike Sound-Alike
34. The best method for preventing IV medication errors is:
- A. Verbal instructions only
- B. Manual calculations
- C. Standardized concentrations and smart pumps
- D. Single-nurse verification
Correct answer: C. Standardized concentrations and smart pumps
35. Pharmacists help improve medication safety by:
- A. Avoiding technology
- B. Ignoring documentation
- C. Educating patients and providers about safe use
- D. Delegating patient interaction
Correct answer: C. Educating patients and providers about safe use
36. What is the role of medication guides provided with certain prescriptions?
- A. Advertise branded drugs
- B. Replace counseling
- C. Educate patients on safe and effective drug use
- D. Confirm insurance coverage
Correct answer: C. Educate patients on safe and effective drug use
37. Which of the following best describes a transcription error?
- A. Failing to report a reaction
- B. Incorrectly entering a verbal or written prescription
- C. Skipping a dose
- D. Documenting blood pressure
Correct answer: B. Incorrectly entering a verbal or written prescription
38. A patient experiences a hypoglycemic episode after taking their normal insulin dose but skipping a meal. This is an example of:
- A. Administration error
- B. Therapeutic duplication
- C. Predictable adverse drug reaction
- D. Placebo effect
Correct answer: C. Predictable adverse drug reaction
39. Which feature of EHRs enhances medication safety most?
- A. Social media integration
- B. Alerts for allergies and interactions
- C. Unlimited prescribing
- D. Direct access to social security numbers
Correct answer: B. Alerts for allergies and interactions
40. What is a medication-use evaluation (MUE)?
- A. A billing process
- B. A marketing tool
- C. A structured method to assess outcomes of drug use in a specific setting
- D. A laboratory test
Correct answer: C. A structured method to assess outcomes of drug use in a specific setting
41. A pharmacist should flag a potential safety concern if a patient is prescribed:
- A. Acetaminophen and ibuprofen
- B. Warfarin and NSAIDs
- C. Multivitamin and zinc
- D. Lisinopril and metoprolol
Correct answer: B. Warfarin and NSAIDs
42. Which federal agency oversees drug labeling and medication guides?
- A. DEA
- B. CMS
- C. FDA
- D. EPA
Correct answer: C. FDA
43. What is a medication adherence aid?
- A. Drug interaction checker
- B. A delivery system
- C. A tool like a pill organizer to support correct use
- D. A calendar
Correct answer: C. A tool like a pill organizer to support correct use
44. Which of the following could prevent insulin dosing errors in a hospital?
- A. Storing all vials together
- B. Using insulin pens with dose selectors
- C. Administering based on memory
- D. Dispensing double doses
Correct answer: B. Using insulin pens with dose selectors
45. What is the most common cause of medication errors?
- A. Drug cost
- B. Poor lighting
- C. Human factors such as communication failures
- D. Barcode errors
Correct answer: C. Human factors such as communication failures
46. How often should a pharmacist review a patient’s medication list in ambulatory care?
- A. Every five years
- B. Only when a problem arises
- C. At every patient visit
- D. At discharge only
Correct answer: C. At every patient visit
47. Which process reduces error risk when transferring prescriptions?
- A. Verbal hand-off without documentation
- B. Using written post-its
- C. Electronic transfer with documentation
- D. Mailing hard copies
Correct answer: C. Electronic transfer with documentation
48. How should medication safety be approached in team-based care?
- A. As an individual pharmacist task
- B. Only during pharmacist rounds
- C. As a shared responsibility across the care team
- D. With weekly reviews only
Correct answer: C. As a shared responsibility across the care team
49. What is the best way to handle a medication error once discovered?
- A. Cover it up
- B. Delay reporting
- C. Report it, disclose to the team, and initiate corrective action
- D. Blame the prescriber
Correct answer: C. Report it, disclose to the team, and initiate corrective action
50. Involving patients in their own care enhances safety by:
- A. Confusing them with details
- B. Limiting autonomy
- C. Promoting engagement and accountability
- D. Delegating responsibility
Correct answer: C. Promoting engagement and accountability