Patient safety is the foundational principle of all healthcare practice. For pharmacists, this translates to a specialized focus on medication safety—designing and managing systems to prevent harm from medications. This is a “transcending concept” in the PharmD curriculum, with dedicated modules in Patient Care 3 and *Patient Care 5*
covering key tools like Root Cause Analysis and health informatics. This quiz will test your knowledge of the systems-based approach to safety, common error types, and the strategies used to create a safer medication-use process.
. The modern approach to patient safety focuses on:
- a. Finding and punishing the individual responsible for an error.
- b. Understanding that most errors are caused by flaws in systems and processes.
- c. Accepting that a certain number of errors are unavoidable.
- d. Focusing only on errors that cause permanent harm.
Answer: b. Understanding that most errors are caused by flaws in systems and processes.
2. A “near miss” is an event that:
- a. Reached the patient and caused harm.
- b. Reached the patient but did not cause harm.
- c. Did not reach the patient because it was caught by a detection barrier.
- d. Is not considered a medication error.
Answer: c. Did not reach the patient because it was caught by a detection barrier.
3. The “Swiss Cheese Model” of accident causation suggests that:
- a. Errors are caused by a single, catastrophic failure.
- b. Systems have multiple defensive layers, and errors occur when the holes in these layers align.
- c. All systems are foolproof.
- d. Only one defensive layer is needed for safety.
Answer: b. Systems have multiple defensive layers, and errors occur when the holes in these layers align.
4. A Root Cause Analysis (RCA) is a ____ tool used to analyze an error that _____.
- a. proactive, might happen
- b. reactive, has already occurred
- c. financial, costs money
- d. prospective, will happen in the future
Answer: b. reactive, has already occurred
5. Which of the following is considered the STRONGEST and most effective type of safety intervention?
- a. Educating staff to “be more careful.”
- b. A policy requiring a double check.
- c. A forcing function or automation that makes the error difficult or impossible.
- d. Placing a warning sticker on a product.
Answer: c. A forcing function or automation that makes the error difficult or impossible.
6. The “Medication Safety” module is a specific learning module in which course?
- a. PHA5787C Patient Care 5
- b. PHA5104 Sterile Compounding
- c. PHA5703 Pharmacy Law and Ethics
- d. PHA5784C Patient Care 4
Answer: a. PHA5787C Patient Care 5
7. A pharmacist receives a prescription for “hydralazine” but accidentally dispenses “hydroxyzine.” This is an example of what type of error?
- a. A wrong dose error
- b. A look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) error
- c. A wrong route error
- d. A wrong time error
Answer: b. A look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) error
8. “Tall Man Lettering” (e.g., hydrOXYzine vs. hydrALAZINE) is a strategy used to:
- a. Make labels more difficult to read.
- b. Reduce the risk of LASA errors.
- c. Fulfill a legal requirement for controlled substances.
- d. Save ink on labels.
Answer: b. Reduce the risk of LASA errors.
9. “High-alert medications” are drugs that:
- a. Are most frequently involved in errors.
- b. Bear a heightened risk of causing significant patient harm when they are used in error.
- c. Are the most expensive.
- d. Are always controlled substances.
Answer: b. Bear a heightened risk of causing significant patient harm when they are used in error.
10. Which of the following is a classic example of a high-alert medication?
- a. Acetaminophen
- b. Ibuprofen
- c. Insulin
- d. Docusate
Answer: c. Insulin
11. The “Patient Safety/Med Errors: Root Cause Analysis” is a “Transcending Concept” in the Patient Care 3 curriculum.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
12. Computerized Provider Order Entry (CPOE) is a health information technology that primarily reduces errors at which stage of the medication-use process?
- a. Prescribing and Transcribing
- b. Dispensing
- c. Administration
- d. Monitoring
Answer: a. Prescribing and Transcribing
13. Barcode Medication Administration (BCMA) is used at the bedside to verify the “five rights,” which helps prevent:
- a. Prescribing errors
- b. Dispensing errors
- c. Administration errors
- d. Monitoring errors
Answer: c. Administration errors
14. A “Just Culture” is an environment that:
- a. Has a zero-tolerance policy for all errors.
- b. Holds individuals accountable for their actions while encouraging error reporting and distinguishing between human error, at-risk behavior, and reckless conduct.
- c. Does not hold anyone accountable for their actions.
- d. Focuses on blaming individuals to set an example.
Answer: b. Holds individuals accountable for their actions while encouraging error reporting and distinguishing between human error, at-risk behavior, and reckless conduct.
15. Reporting medication errors and near-misses is a key objective for student pharmacists in their experiential rotations.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
16. A Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA) is a tool used to:
- a. Analyze an error after it has occurred.
- b. Proactively evaluate a process to identify where failures might occur and what their effects would be.
- c. Discipline staff members.
- d. Document patient care.
Answer: b. Proactively evaluate a process to identify where failures might occur and what their effects would be.
17. “Introduction to Medication Errors” is a module within the Professional Practice Skills Lab II curriculum.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
18. A pharmacist failing to adjust the dose of a renally-cleared drug for a patient with CKD is an example of an error of:
- a. Commission
- b. Omission
- c. Dispensing
- d. Communication
Answer: b. Omission
19. A key role for the pharmacist on the healthcare team is to serve as the:
- a. Team leader in all situations.
- b. Medication safety expert.
- c. Primary diagnostician.
- d. Financial advisor.
Answer: b. Medication safety expert.
20. An active learning session on medication safety is part of the Patient Care 5 course.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
21. A pharmacist receives a prescription with an unsafe abbreviation (e.g., “U” for units). The safest action is to:
- a. Interpret the abbreviation based on their best guess.
- b. Dispense the prescription as written.
- c. Contact the prescriber for clarification.
- d. Ask the patient what the prescriber meant.
Answer: c. Contact the prescriber for clarification.
22. A “forcing function” is the weakest type of safety intervention.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: b. False
23. The “Health information and informatics” module covers technologies used to improve patient safety.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
24. An active learning session on medication safety is part of which course?
- a. PHA5787C Patient Care 5
- b. PHA5163L Professional Skills Lab 3
- c. PHA5781 Patient Care I
- d. PHA5782C Patient Care 2
Answer: a. PHA5787C Patient Care 5
25. Medication Reconciliation is a process designed to prevent errors at:
- a. The point of prescribing only.
- b. The point of dispensing only.
- c. Transitions of care (e.g., admission, discharge).
- d. The point of administration only.
Answer: c. Transitions of care (e.g., admission, discharge).
26. In an RCA, the primary goal of asking “why” multiple times is to:
- a. Confuse the person being interviewed.
- b. Move beyond the immediate cause to find the underlying system-level factors.
- c. Assign blame to multiple people.
- d. Lengthen the investigation.
Answer: b. Move beyond the immediate cause to find the underlying system-level factors.
27. “Confirmation bias” is a cognitive bias that can lead to medication errors when a pharmacist:
- a. Double checks every prescription meticulously.
- b. Sees what they expect to see on a label or screen, rather than what is actually there.
- c. Questions every order.
- d. Refuses to dispense a medication.
Answer: b. Sees what they expect to see on a label or screen, rather than what is actually there.
28. An active learning session on medication safety is part of which course module?
- a. Module 4: Medication Safety
- b. Module 1: Diabetes Mellitus
- c. Module 3: Women’s Health
- d. Module 8: Men’s Health
Answer: a. Module 4: Medication Safety
29. Storing concentrated electrolytes like potassium chloride in patient care areas is:
- a. A recommended safety practice.
- b. A well-known risk for serious medication errors and is strongly discouraged.
- c. Required by law.
- d. A cost-saving measure.
Answer: b. A well-known risk for serious medication errors and is strongly discouraged.
30. The “Interprofessional Communication & Medication Safety” is a transcending concept in the Patient Care 5 curriculum.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
31. Which of the following is a key component of a “culture of safety”?
- a. A non-punitive approach to error reporting.
- b. A commitment from leadership to patient safety.
- c. Collaboration across disciplines.
- d. All of the above.
Answer: d. All of the above.
32. An independent double check requires:
- a. One person checking their own work twice.
- b. Two individuals checking the work separately from each other.
- c. A pharmacist and a technician checking the work together.
- d. The patient to check the work.
Answer: b. Two individuals checking the work separately from each other.
33. The principles of a Just Culture are foundational to medication safety.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
34. The use of a “smart pump” drug library helps prevent IV medication errors by:
- a. Automatically mixing the IV bag.
- b. Alerting the user if a programmed dose or rate is outside pre-set safety limits.
- c. Placing the IV line into the patient.
- d. Verifying the patient’s identity.
Answer: b. Alerting the user if a programmed dose or rate is outside pre-set safety limits.
35. A pharmacist who identifies and resolves a drug therapy problem during a DUR is actively:
- a. Preventing a potential medication error or adverse event.
- b. Wasting time.
- c. Performing a task outside their scope.
- d. Creating more work for the physician.
Answer: a. Preventing a potential medication error or adverse event.
36. “Alert fatigue” from a Clinical Decision Support System (CDSS) can compromise patient safety because:
- a. It can lead to clinicians ignoring important, clinically significant alerts.
- b. It means the system is working perfectly.
- c. It slows down the computer system.
- d. It causes the alerts to be more accurate.
Answer: a. It can lead to clinicians ignoring important, clinically significant alerts.
37. Which of the following is the weakest form of safety intervention?
- a. An automated forcing function.
- b. Standardizing a process.
- c. An independent double check.
- d. An educational memo telling staff to be more careful.
Answer: d. An educational memo telling staff to be more careful.
38. The RCA module is part of the Patient Care 3 curriculum.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
39. A key to preventing administration errors in the hospital is:
- a. The patient’s family member bringing in home medications.
- b. The “five rights” (right patient, drug, dose, route, time).
- c. Using verbal orders whenever possible.
- d. Having nurses mix all IV medications at the bedside.
Answer: b. The “five rights” (right patient, drug, dose, route, time).
40. An active learning session covering medication safety is part of which course?
- a. PHA5787C Patient Care 5
- b. PHA5163L Professional Skills Lab 3
- c. PHA5781 Patient Care I
- d. PHA5782C Patient Care 2
Answer: a. PHA5787C Patient Care 5
41. The primary goal of analyzing near-miss data is to:
- a. Identify which employees are making the most mistakes.
- b. Identify system vulnerabilities before they cause harm.
- c. Fulfill a documentation requirement.
- d. Create more work for the safety officer.
Answer: b. Identify system vulnerabilities before they cause harm.
42. Which of the following is NOT an error-prone abbreviation according to ISMP?
- a. U (for units)
- b. q.d. (for once daily)
- c. mg (for milligram)
- d. MSO4 (for morphine sulfate)
Answer: c. mg (for milligram)
43. A pharmacist’s professional and ethical obligation is to report medication errors.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
44. A patient returning a medication to the pharmacy because it’s the wrong color is an example of:
- a. A good catch by the patient that prevented an error.
- b. The patient being difficult.
- c. A problem with the manufacturer.
- d. An adherence issue.
Answer: a. A good catch by the patient that prevented an error.
45. Improving patient safety requires a ____ approach.
- a. multidisciplinary and collaborative
- b. single-discipline
- c. top-down, authoritarian
- d. blame-focused
Answer: a. multidisciplinary and collaborative
46. Effective interprofessional communication is a key strategy to improve medication safety.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
47. The “Medication Safety” module is part of the Patient Care 5 curriculum.
- a. True
- b. False
Answer: a. True
48. An active learning session on medication safety is part of which course module?
- a. Module 4: Medication Safety
- b. Module 1: Diabetes Mellitus
- c. Module 3: Women’s Health
- d. Module 8: Men’s Health
Answer: a. Module 4: Medication Safety
49. The overall management of patient safety in a healthcare organization is the responsibility of:
- a. Only the risk management department.
- b. Only the physicians and nurses.
- c. Everyone in the organization, from leadership to front-line staff.
- d. Only the pharmacists.
Answer: c. Everyone in the organization, from leadership to front-line staff.
50. The ultimate goal of learning about patient safety is to:
- a. Understand the principles and apply the tools needed to create a safer healthcare environment for patients.
- b. Avoid being sued.
- c. Pass the final exam.
- d. Be able to correctly identify all high-alert medications.
Answer: a. Understand the principles and apply the tools needed to create a safer healthcare environment for patients.
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