(2026/2027):
A 150-Question NGN-Integrated Practice Framework for
NCLEX-RN Readiness
_____________________________________________
An Academic Review Aligned with the NCSBN Client Needs Framework and the Clinical
Judgment Measurement Model (CJMM)
Prepared for: Pre-Licensure Nursing Candidates
Discipline: Nursing Education / NCLEX-RN Readiness
Date: June 26, 2026
Edition: 2026/2027 (NGN-Integrated)
Document Type: Academic Review / Examination Practice Framework
Academic Integrity Notice: All 150 questions in this document are ORIGINAL practice items authored in
HESI/NCLEX-RN NGN style for educational use. They do not reproduce, paraphrase, or distribute actual Elsevier
HESI Exit exam content. Use of unauthorized “brain dumps” or leaked exam PDFs violates academic integrity
policies and may jeopardize licensure.
,Abstract
This review presents a structured, 150-question practice framework aligned with the Elsevier HESI
Comprehensive Exit Examination and the current Next Generation NCLEX-RN (NGN) Detailed Test
Plan. The item distribution mirrors the official NCSBN Client Needs Framework, spanning Safe and
Effective Care Environment (Management of Care and Safety/Infection Control), Health Promotion
and Maintenance, Psychosocial Integrity, Physiological Integrity (Basic Care and Comfort,
Pharmacological and Parenteral Therapies, Reduction of Risk Potential, and Physiological
Adaptation), and NGN Clinical Judgment using the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model
(CJMM). Each item includes four response options, a verified correct answer presented in bold cyan,
and a concise rationale anchored in current evidence-based guidelines from the American Heart
Association, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Surviving Sepsis Campaign, American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Institute for
Safe Medication Practices. The review emphasizes prioritization frameworks (ABC, Maslow,
“unstable-before-stable”), delegation by scope of practice (RN/LPN/UAP), medication safety, multi-
system pathophysiology, and the six cognitive steps of the CJMM (Recognize Cues, Analyze Cues,
Prioritize Hypotheses, Generate Solutions, Take Action, Evaluate Outcomes). All items are original;
the document is intended as an educational study aid rather than a reproduction of proprietary HESI
examination content.
Keywords:
HESI Exit Exam; NCLEX-RN; Next Generation NCLEX (NGN); Clinical Judgment Measurement
Model; nursing education; prioritization; delegation; pharmacological safety; patient safety; exam
preparation.
1. Introduction
The Health Education Systems, Inc. (HESI) Comprehensive Exit Examination is
administered by Elsevier as a final programmatic assessment that nursing programs use to
predict first-time NCLEX-RN success. The 2026/2027 examination consists of 150 multiple-
choice and NGN-style items, including Bowtie, Trend, Matrix, Highlight, Drop-Down
Rationales, and Unfolding Case Studies, completed within an approximate four-hour testing
window. A predictive probability score (e.g., >900) is associated with a high likelihood of
NCLEX-RN success, making the Exit Examination a high-stakes milestone for pre-licensure
nursing students.
, This document provides a comprehensive, NGN-aligned practice framework composed of
150 original items distributed across the NCSBN Client Needs categories. Each question is
accompanied by four options, a verified correct answer formatted in bold cyan, and a
rationale that integrates clinical reasoning, evidence-based guidelines, scope-of-practice
considerations, and CJMM cognitive processes. The framework is designed to reinforce
analytical reasoning rather than rote memorization, supporting the development of clinical
judgment required for both HESI Exit success and NCLEX-RN readiness.
Important clarification: “HESI Exit V3” and “PDF” terminology frequently used by third-
party test-prep vendors refers to outdated, pre-NGN test banks. Current HESI Exit Exams are
fully integrated with NGN item types, and Elsevier does not distribute official examination
content as PDFs. This document is an independently authored study aid and is not affiliated
with, endorsed by, or derived from proprietary Elsevier HESI examination materials.
2. Methodology and Examination Structure
The 150 items in this review are organized to mirror the official content distribution of the
NCSBN Client Needs Framework: Safe and Effective Care Environment (approximately 21–
33%), Health Promotion and Maintenance (approximately 6–12%), Psychosocial Integrity
(approximately 6–12%), and Physiological Integrity (approximately 38–62%). A dedicated
section of NGN Clinical Judgment items integrates unfolding cases, matrix (multiple
response), trend, Bowtie, highlight, and drop-down rationale formats to model the cognitive
complexity of the current examination. Each item was constructed to assess one or more
CJMM cognitive steps: Recognize Cues, Analyze Cues, Prioritize Hypotheses, Generate
Solutions, Take Action, and Evaluate Outcomes.
Table 1. Content Distribution of Practice Items
Domain (NCSBN Client Item Count Question Range
Needs)
Management of Care 20 Q1–Q20
Safety and Infection Control 15 Q21–Q35
Health Promotion and 12 Q36–Q47
Maintenance
Psychosocial Integrity 12 Q48–Q59
Basic Care and Comfort 12 Q60–Q71
Pharmacological and 22 Q72–Q93
Parenteral Therapies
Reduction of Risk Potential 17 Q94–Q110
Physiological Adaptation 22 Q111–Q132
NGN Clinical Judgment 18 Q133–Q150
, (Unfolding Cases)
TOTAL 150 Q1–Q150
3. Prioritization and Delegation Frameworks
Mastery of prioritization and delegation is essential for HESI Exit and NCLEX-RN
success. The nurse must apply the ABC framework (Airway, Breathing, Circulation) before
Maslow’s hierarchy when physiological threats exist, distinguish unstable from stable clients
(assessing the unstable client first), prioritize acute over chronic conditions, and address
systemic problems before local ones. Delegation must align with the Five Rights of
Delegation (right task, right circumstance, right person, right direction/communication, and
right supervision/evaluation) and the NCSBN scope-of-practice definitions: the RN performs
assessment, teaching, evaluation, and clinical judgment; the LPN cares for stable clients with
predictable outcomes and performs routine procedures; and the unlicensed assistive personnel
(UAP) assists with activities of daily living, measures vital signs on stable clients, and
records intake and output.
The CJMM further structures reasoning into six cognitive steps. Recognize Cues involves
identifying relevant clinical data; Analyze Cues interprets these data in context; Prioritize
Hypotheses ranks potential explanations by urgency and likelihood; Generate Solutions
develops an actionable plan; Take Action executes the plan; and Evaluate Outcomes assesses
the effectiveness of interventions. NGN items often combine multiple CJMM steps within a
single unfolding case, requiring candidates to demonstrate integrated clinical judgment rather
than isolated factual recall.
Answer Key Format. In every question that follows, the correct answer is displayed in
bold cyan typeface. A concise rationale follows each item, explaining why the correct option
is most appropriate and why the alternative options are less appropriate based on patient
safety priorities, evidence hierarchy, scope-of-practice boundaries, and outcome optimization.
4. Practice Questions (Q1–Q150)
The following 150 original practice questions are organized by NCSBN Client Needs
domain. Each question presents a clinical scenario, four response options, the verified correct
answer in bold cyan, and a rationale. Items in the final section (Q133–Q150) integrate NGN
formats including unfolding cases, matrix (multiple response), trend, Bowtie, highlight, and
drop-down rationale items.