, CONTEXT
Chapter 1. Population Health
Chapter 2. Determinants of Health
Chapter 3. Advanced Practice Nursing Role and Competencies in
Epidemiology and Population Health
Chapter 4. Epidemiology Primer
Chapter 5. Historical Epidemiological Perspectives
Chapter 6. Etiology and Natural History of Disease and Illness
Chapter 7. Disease Occurrence: Morbidity and Mortality
Chapter 8. Diagnostic and Screening Tests: Validity and Reliability
Chapter 9. Risk Assessment and Estimation
Chapter 10. Observational Epidemiologic Research: Introduction to
Observational Research – Descriptive, Case Studies, Case Series,
Ecological, and Cross-Sectional
Chapter 11. Cohort Studies
Chapter 12. Case Control, Other Study Designs, and Research
Appraisal
Chapter 13. Experimental Studies: Quasi-Experimental, Experimental,
and Randomized Clinical Trials
Chapter 14. Epidemiologic Design Bias, Confounders, and Interaction
Chapter 15. Biostatistics Primer
Chapter 16. Field, Forensic, and Legal Epidemiology
Chapter 17. Pandemic Epidemiology
Chapter 18. Social Epidemiology
Chapter 19. Infectious Disease Epidemiology
Chapter 20. Genetic and Environmental Epidemiology
Chapter 21. Occupational Epidemiology
Chapter 22. Reproductive and Maternal Health Epidemiology
Chapter 23. Clinical and Healthcare Epidemiology and Evidence-Based
Healthcare
Chapter 24. Epidemiology in Health Policy and Program Evaluation
Chapter 25. Epidemiological Ethical and Professional Issues
,Chapter 1: Population Health
Q1. A nurse practitioner is reviewing the rates of hypertension in two
neighborhoods. Neighborhood A has a prevalence of 30%, and Neighborhood B
has 15%. The NP implements a community exercise program in Neighborhood A.
Which population health approach is the NP demonstrating?
A. Individual-level care
B. Population-based intervention
C. Primary prevention for high-risk individuals
D. Tertiary prevention
Answer: B
Rationale: A population-based approach targets health outcomes across groups
rather than individual patients. Implementing a program for an entire
neighborhood exemplifies population-level intervention.
Keywords: population health, population-based intervention, community
program
Q2. An APN notices high asthma rates among children in urban low-income
communities. The NP partners with schools to improve indoor air quality. This
action primarily addresses:
A. Genetic determinants of health
B. Environmental determinants of health
C. Behavioral determinants of health
D. Economic determinants of health
,Answer: B
Rationale: Environmental determinants include factors like air quality. By
targeting indoor air in schools, the NP addresses an environmental determinant
affecting population health.
Keywords: environmental health, determinants of health, population
intervention
Q3. A hospital APN uses census data to identify neighborhoods with the highest
diabetes prevalence. This is an example of:
A. Epidemiologic surveillance
B. Risk factor modification
C. Health promotion at an individual level
D. Clinical practice guidelines
Answer: A
Rationale: Epidemiologic surveillance involves using population-level data to
monitor health outcomes and identify high-risk communities.
Keywords: surveillance, prevalence, population-level data
Q4. A community-based APN implements a vaccination campaign in multiple
schools. The program targets all children regardless of risk. Which level of
prevention is this?
A. Primary prevention
B. Secondary prevention
C. Tertiary prevention
D. Quaternary prevention
Answer: A
Rationale: Primary prevention aims to prevent disease before it occurs.
,Vaccination campaigns for all children reduce disease incidence at the
population level.
Keywords: primary prevention, vaccination, population health
Q5. An APN compares infant mortality rates between two counties and observes
disparities by race and socioeconomic status. What does this illustrate?
A. Health equity
B. Health disparity
C. Social justice
D. Risk adjustment
Answer: B
Rationale: Health disparities are differences in health outcomes linked to social,
economic, or environmental disadvantage.
Keywords: health disparity, infant mortality, social determinants
Q6. A case study reports a neighborhood with high obesity prevalence. The APN
implements walking trails, nutrition workshops, and mobile health apps. This is
an example of:
A. Individual care
B. Community-oriented population health strategy
C. Disease-specific treatment
D. Health insurance intervention
Answer: B
Rationale: A multifaceted intervention targeting an entire community
demonstrates a population health strategy that addresses multiple determinants.
Keywords: community intervention, population strategy, health promotion
,Q7. An APN examines life expectancy across several regions and notices that
low-income areas have shorter life spans. Which factor is most likely
contributing?
A. Genetic variation
B. Social determinants of health
C. Universal health access
D. Random disease distribution
Answer: B
Rationale: Social determinants (income, education, housing) significantly
influence population-level health outcomes like life expectancy.
Keywords: social determinants, life expectancy, health inequity
Q8. A nurse practitioner designs a program to reduce smoking rates in
adolescents. The program includes community education and policy advocacy
for tobacco-free zones. This intervention reflects:
A. Individual counseling
B. Population-level health promotion
C. Pharmacologic therapy
D. Clinical screening
Answer: B
Rationale: Integrating education and policy advocacy affects the health of the
adolescent population rather than just individuals.
Keywords: health promotion, policy, adolescent population
, Q9. An APN analyzing health outcomes notices that two communities with
similar access to healthcare have different rates of heart disease. Which principle
of population health does this illustrate?
A. Genetics alone determine health outcomes
B. Contextual factors influence population health
C. Healthcare access is sufficient to eliminate disparities
D. Random variation explains differences
Answer: B
Rationale: Contextual factors (environment, social determinants, behaviors)
contribute to population health differences even when healthcare access is
similar.
Keywords: social determinants, contextual factors, population health disparities
Q10. A community health NP conducts a neighborhood survey and identifies
food deserts as a barrier to healthy diets. Which intervention best aligns with
population health principles?
A. Prescribing vitamins to individual patients
B. Partnering with local grocers to increase access to fresh produce
C. Referring patients to dietitians individually
D. Increasing clinical check-ups for hypertension
Answer: B
Rationale: Modifying environmental factors that affect an entire population
(food deserts) is consistent with population health approaches.
Keywords: food deserts, environmental intervention, population health
Q11. An APN is asked to evaluate a city’s health status. Which metric best
reflects population-level health outcomes?