Introduction:
This quiz set on the quality systems approach and management responsibilities is designed specifically for M.Pharm students preparing for advanced coursework and regulatory exams. It focuses on how a robust quality management system (QMS) is structured, the role of top management in establishing policy, providing resources, and ensuring continual improvement through reviews, risk management, CAPA and change control. Questions probe responsibilities for documentation, supplier management, training, audit oversight and regulatory compliance within pharmaceutical manufacturing. Working through these MCQs will deepen understanding of practical expectations from management and the systemic controls necessary to assure product quality and patient safety in the pharmaceutical industry.
Q1. Which of the following best defines a pharmaceutical Quality Management System (QMS)?
- A set of unrelated procedures used only during inspections
- A planned and systematic collection of processes to ensure product quality and compliance
- A documentation repository maintained by the quality assurance department only
- An IT system for tracking batch records
Correct Answer: A planned and systematic collection of processes to ensure product quality and compliance
Q2. What is the primary responsibility of top management in a pharmaceutical QMS?
- Performing routine laboratory testing
- Establishing and promoting quality policy, objectives, and ensuring resources
- Writing all standard operating procedures (SOPs)
- Auditing suppliers personally
Correct Answer: Establishing and promoting quality policy, objectives, and ensuring resources
Q3. Which management activity is essential for ensuring continual improvement of the QMS?
- Management review meetings with review of metrics, CAPA status and resources
- Hiring more production staff without training
- Increasing inventory levels to avoid shortages
- Reducing audit frequency to save costs
Correct Answer: Management review meetings with review of metrics, CAPA status and resources
Q4. Which of the following is a key element of management responsibility under GMP?
- Ensuring immediate disposal of all deviations without investigation
- Assigning clear authorities, responsibilities and ensuring personnel competence
- Delegating quality decisions to external contractors only
- Consolidating all records off-site permanently
Correct Answer: Assigning clear authorities, responsibilities and ensuring personnel competence
Q5. In the context of quality systems, CAPA stands for:
- Corrective and Preventive Actions
- Compliance Assessment and Procedural Auditing
- Critical Analysis for Production Approval
- Control and Product Authorization
Correct Answer: Corrective and Preventive Actions
Q6. Which activity is part of management’s role in supplier and contractor control?
- Selecting suppliers based solely on lowest price
- Establishing qualification criteria, conducting risk assessments and performance monitoring
- Allowing suppliers to self-certify without oversight
- Outsourcing supplier audits entirely with no internal review
Correct Answer: Establishing qualification criteria, conducting risk assessments and performance monitoring
Q7. What is the purpose of a quality policy issued by management?
- To provide detailed instructions for laboratory tests
- To communicate management’s commitment to quality and set overall objectives
- To document only financial targets for the company
- To replace the need for SOPs and procedures
Correct Answer: To communicate management’s commitment to quality and set overall objectives
Q8. During a management review, which data should be evaluated to assess QMS effectiveness?
- Audit findings, CAPA status, customer complaints, process performance and changes
- Only the annual profit figures
- Personal opinions of senior staff without supporting data
- Employee vacation schedules
Correct Answer: Audit findings, CAPA status, customer complaints, process performance and changes
Q9. Which of the following describes an effective change control process managed by quality and management?
- Implementing changes immediately and documenting them later
- Documented evaluation, risk assessment, approval before implementation and verification after change
- Relying on verbal approvals for operational changes
- Ignoring minor changes and never reviewing their impact
Correct Answer: Documented evaluation, risk assessment, approval before implementation and verification after change
Q10. Management must ensure training and competence. Which practice best demonstrates this responsibility?
- Only providing training to new hires and never updating it
- Maintaining documented training programs, conducting competency assessments and refresher training
- Assuming competence based on academic degrees alone
- Allowing staff to train themselves informally without records
Correct Answer: Maintaining documented training programs, conducting competency assessments and refresher training
Q11. Which metric is most useful for management to monitor the health of the QMS?
- Number of coffee breaks taken by staff
- Trend of product quality deviations, CAPA closure time and customer complaints
- Building square footage
- Amount spent on marketing
Correct Answer: Trend of product quality deviations, CAPA closure time and customer complaints
Q12. How should management handle regulatory inspections and findings?
- Ignore findings and hope regulators do not follow up
- Ensure documented, timely responses, corrective actions and systemic root-cause analysis
- Delegate responses to production staff without oversight
- Respond only verbally during the inspection
Correct Answer: Ensure documented, timely responses, corrective actions and systemic root-cause analysis
Q13. Risk management within a pharmaceutical QMS primarily aims to:
- Completely eliminate all risks regardless of cost
- Identify, evaluate and mitigate risks to product quality and patient safety proportionally
- Increase bureaucracy without improving outcomes
- Transfer all risks to suppliers through contracts
Correct Answer: Identify, evaluate and mitigate risks to product quality and patient safety proportionally
Q14. Which statement best reflects management’s role in fostering a quality culture?
- Quality is a task only for the QA department
- Top management demonstrates visible commitment, supports reporting of issues and rewards quality behavior
- Discouraging staff from reporting near-misses to avoid paperwork
- Promoting production speed above all quality considerations
Correct Answer: Top management demonstrates visible commitment, supports reporting of issues and rewards quality behavior
Q15. Documentation control within a QMS requires management to ensure:
- Outdated procedures remain in use to avoid change
- Documents are approved, version-controlled, accessible and obsolete documents are removed
- Only electronic copies exist with no backup
- All documents are printed and never reviewed
Correct Answer: Documents are approved, version-controlled, accessible and obsolete documents are removed
Q16. Which of the following is an appropriate management response to a major quality trend identified in metrics?
- Initiate a root cause investigation, implement CAPA, and monitor effectiveness
- Ignore the trend until it becomes a severe failure
- Blame frontline staff publicly without investigation
- Reduce reporting to hide the trend
Correct Answer: Initiate a root cause investigation, implement CAPA, and monitor effectiveness
Q17. What is the role of management in internal audits?
- Ensure audits are scheduled, adequately resourced, findings reviewed and corrective actions followed up
- Perform all audits personally even if unqualified
- Ignore audit findings unless regulators find them
- Only audit financial processes and ignore quality processes
Correct Answer: Ensure audits are scheduled, adequately resourced, findings reviewed and corrective actions followed up
Q18. Which document typically records management’s formal decisions and actions during a QMS review?
- Management review minutes and action list
- Personal emails between staff members
- Uncontrolled draft SOPs
- External marketing brochures
Correct Answer: Management review minutes and action list
Q19. When implementing a new production process, what responsibility does management have regarding validation?
- Ensure process validation is planned, executed, documented and approved before routine manufacture
- Start commercial manufacturing immediately and validate later
- Leave validation completely to equipment vendors
- Only validate visual appearance and ignore critical parameters
Correct Answer: Ensure process validation is planned, executed, documented and approved before routine manufacture
Q20. How should management ensure effective communication of quality objectives across the organization?
- Publish objectives in a single annual memo that nobody reads
- Communicate objectives clearly, align departmental targets, and review progress regularly with feedback loops
- Keep objectives confidential at the senior level only
- Change objectives frequently without explanation
Correct Answer: Communicate objectives clearly, align departmental targets, and review progress regularly with feedback loops

