Illinois Nursing Home
Administrators Practice Exam
PART 0: Table of Contents
Section Cognitive Tier Focus Area Question Range
PART I The Preview Critical Axioms & Exam N/A
Matrix
PART II Tier 1: Foundational Core Definitions, Q1 – Q15
Syntax Formulas & Statutes
PART II Tier 2: Complex Situation/Variable Q16 – Q35
Application Modification
PART II Tier 3: Grandmaster Multi-Variable Crisis & Q36 – Q60
Synthesis Synthesis
PART I: The Preview
Mastering this test bank translates directly to elite licensure performance and unassailable
clinical facility management under the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH). We replace
rote memorization with a synthesized understanding of the Illinois Nursing Home Care Act (210
ILCS 45) and the Illinois Administrative Code (77 Ill. Adm. Code 300), forging administrative
mastery that withstands rigorous regulatory scrutiny.
The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
● The 2025 Staffing Mandate: Skilled Care requires 3.8 hours of direct care per resident
day; Intermediate Care requires 2.5 hours. Exactly 25% of all required hours must be
licensed nurses, and 10% must be Registered Nurses (RNs).
● The Understaffing Fine Matrix: Starting in 2025, IDPH enforces strict non-compliance
penalties based on missing wages and benefits: 1st Offense (125%), 2nd Offense
(150%), 3rd+ Offense (200%).
● The Violation Hierarchy:
○ Type AA: Proximate cause of death ($25,000 fine + 6-month conditional license).
○ Type A: Substantial probability of death or serious harm ($12,500 fine).
○ Type B: More likely than not to cause more than minimal harm ($2,200 fine, often
doubled for high-risk).
, ● Resident Trust Funds: Any funds exceeding $100 MUST be placed in an
interest-bearing account. Surety bonds must match the maximum funds held in the prior
year or the estimated 12-month future maximum, whichever is greater.
● Involuntary Discharge Timelines: Standard notice is 21 days; Medicare/Medicaid notice
is 30 days. Residents have exactly 10 days to file a hearing request, which automatically
stays the discharge.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1 - Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: A licensed Nursing Home Administrator in Illinois is preparing for license renewal. Based on
the provisions of 225 ILCS 70/11, which requirement dictates the exact Continuing Education
(CE) mandate prior to the November 30 expiration in an odd-numbered year? A) 24 hours
annually, including 2 hours of ethics. B) 48 hours every three years, with 10 hours of health
equity. C) 36 hours of continuing education in the 2-year period preceding the renewal date. D)
36 hours annually, verified by the NAB Registry.
● The Answer: C (36 hours of continuing education in the 2-year period preceding the
renewal date.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: This reflects cross-discipline metrics, not the specific administrative
requirement.
○ B is incorrect: Illinois NHA licenses operate on a biennial, not triennial, cycle.
○ D is incorrect: The 36 hours are required biennially, not annually.
The Mentor's Analysis: Administrative licensure hinges on strict biennial compliance. When
facing renewal, the immediate priority is verifying 36 approved CE hours prior to the odd-year
deadline. By utilizing approved sponsor logs, the administrator bypasses the common trap of
falling short during random IDFPR audits. Professional/Academic Intuition: 36 hours every 2
years is the unalterable hard deck for Illinois NHA license renewal.
Q2: Under 77 Ill. Adm. Code 300.1230, an administrator is calculating direct care staffing
minimums for residents requiring skilled care. What is the MOST ACCURATE required ratio per
resident, per day? A) 2.5 hours of nursing and personal care. B) 3.8 hours of nursing and
personal care. C) 3.48 hours of total nursing care. D) 4.1 hours of direct clinical care.
● The Answer: B (3.8 hours of nursing and personal care.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: 2.5 hours is the specific mandate for Intermediate Care residents.
○ C is incorrect: 3.48 hours was the briefly proposed 2024 CMS federal rule (which
was repealed), not the higher Illinois state standard.
○ D is incorrect: This is an analytical error overstating the statutory minimum
requirement.
The Mentor's Analysis: Illinois statutes supersede federal baselines. When calculating skilled
care needs, the immediate priority is multiplying the SNF census by 3.8. By utilizing the State
Minimums, the facility bypasses the common trap of understaffing based on repealed or lesser
federal rules. Professional/Academic Intuition: Illinois Skilled Care requires 3.8 hours;
Intermediate Care requires 2.5 hours.
Q3: A facility manages personal funds for its residents. A resident's account reaches $105.
Based on 210 ILCS 45/2-201 of the Illinois Nursing Home Care Act, what is the facility's
, IMMEDIATE fiduciary obligation? A) Place the entire $105 in a non-interest-bearing petty cash
account. B) Return the funds over $100 to the resident's family. C) Deposit funds in excess of
$100 into an interest-bearing account. D) Apply the $5 excess to the resident's outstanding
facility bill.
● The Answer: C (Deposit funds in excess of $100 into an interest-bearing account.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Facilities may only keep up to $100 in non-interest-bearing petty
cash.
○ B is incorrect: The facility retains fiduciary duty; transferring funds arbitrarily to
family violates resident autonomy.
○ D is incorrect: Commingling or seizing funds for facility bills without explicit,
separate authorization is illegal.
The Mentor's Analysis: Fiduciary compliance relies on rigid financial thresholds. When
resident funds exceed $100, the immediate priority is utilizing an interest-bearing account where
all interest accrues directly to the resident. By utilizing segregated accounts, the facility
bypasses the trap of financial misappropriation citations. Professional/Academic Intuition:
The $100 mark separates petty cash convenience from mandatory interest-bearing
fiduciary protection.
Q4: A facility incurs a Type AA violation from the IDPH. Which definition MOST ACCURATELY
describes this specific level of violation under the Nursing Home Care Act? A) A condition that
creates a substantial probability of serious physical harm. B) A condition that creates a
substantial probability that less than minimal harm will result. C) A condition or occurrence at the
facility that proximately caused a resident's death. D) A condition that is more likely than not to
cause more than minimal physical harm.
● The Answer: C (A condition or occurrence at the facility that proximately caused a
resident's death.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: This is the exact statutory definition of a Type A violation.
○ B is incorrect: This defines a Type C violation.
○ D is incorrect: This defines a Type B violation.
The Mentor's Analysis: Regulatory severity is tiered directly by clinical outcome. When a
resident fatality occurs due to facility negligence, the immediate priority is crisis management for
a Type AA violation. By understanding Proximate Cause, administrators bypass the trap of
minimizing catastrophic systemic failures during survey defense. Professional/Academic
Intuition: Type AA equates unequivocally to the proximate cause of a resident's death; it
is the ultimate administrative and clinical failure.
Q5: Based on the 2025 Illinois staffing penalty structures, what is the financial penalty for a
facility's FIRST offense of missing mandated direct care staffing hours? A) A flat fine of $12,500.
B) 125% of the cost of wages and benefits for the missing staffing hours. C) 150% of the cost of
wages and benefits for the missing staffing hours. D) 200% of the cost of wages and benefits for
the missing staffing hours.
● The Answer: B (125% of the cost of wages and benefits for the missing staffing hours.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Flat fines apply to Type A care violations, not statutory staffing
shortage calculations.
○ C is incorrect: 150% is the penalty designated for the second offense. * D is
incorrect: 200% is the penalty designated for the third and all subsequent offenses.
The Mentor's Analysis: Staffing shortages are now aggressively monetized by the state