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Family Medicine EOR Psychiatry Exam 2026/2027 | Complete Questions & Verified Answers | Physician Assistant (PA) End of Rotation Assessment

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This document provides comprehensive preparation for the Physician Assistant (PA) Family Medicine End of Rotation (EOR) Psychiatry Examination, featuring complete questions with verified answers for the 2026/2027 academic cycle. It covers mood disorders (depression, bipolar), anxiety disorders (GAD, panic, PTSD, OCD), psychotic disorders (schizophrenia, schizoaffective), substance use disorders and withdrawal management, somatic symptom and related disorders, eating disorders, child and adolescent behavioral health (ADHD, autism spectrum), suicide risk assessment and crisis intervention, and psychopharmacology in primary care settings according to current NCCPA blueprint standards and physician assistant education requirements. This essential tool offers authentic EOR exam simulation and systematic content review to ensure mastery of psychiatry principles and success on your family medicine rotation assessment.

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Family Medicine EOR Psychiatry
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Uploaded on
January 13, 2026
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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Family Medicine EOR Psychiatry Exam
(2026/2027) | QUESTIONS AND VERIFIED
ANSWERS
Physician Assistant (PA) Family Medicine End of Rotation (EOR) Psychiatry Examination |
Core Domains: Mood Disorders (Depression, Bipolar), Anxiety Disorders (GAD, Panic, PTSD,
OCD), Psychotic Disorders (Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective), Substance Use Disorders &
Withdrawal, Somatic Symptom & Related Disorders, Eating Disorders, Child & Adolescent
Behavioral Health (ADHD, Autism Spectrum), Suicide Risk Assessment & Crisis Intervention,
and Psychopharmacology in Primary Care | Physician Assistant Education Focus |
Specialty-Specific EOR Exam Format


Exam Structure

The Family Medicine EOR Psychiatry exam for the 2026/2027 academic cycle is an 80-question,
multiple-choice question (MCQ) examination.

Introduction​
This Family Medicine EOR Psychiatry exam guide for the 2026/2027 cycle prepares Physician
Assistant students for the psychiatry-focused End of Rotation examination. The content assesses
the diagnosis, management, and appropriate referral of common mental health conditions
within the scope of family medicine, emphasizing the biopsychosocial model, safe prescribing,
therapeutic communication, and the integration of behavioral health into primary care.

Answer Format​
All correct answers and clinical management strategies must be presented in bold and green,
followed by detailed rationales that apply DSM-6 diagnostic criteria, justify initial
pharmacotherapy (SSRIs, mood stabilizers), outline non-pharmacologic interventions (CBT,
MI), describe safety monitoring for medications, and specify criteria for urgent psychiatric
referral or hospitalization.


Question 1: A 34-year-old woman presents with persistent low mood, anhedonia, fatigue, poor
concentration, insomnia, and feelings of worthlessness for the past 3 months. She denies
suicidal ideation. Physical exam and labs are normal. Which of the following is the most
appropriate first-line pharmacologic treatment?



(A) Amitriptyline



(B) Bupropion



(C) Sertraline

,(D) Lithium



(E) Lorazepam


Correct Answer: (C) Sertraline


Rationale: This patient meets DSM-6 criteria for major depressive disorder (MDD). First-line
pharmacotherapy in primary care includes SSRIs (e.g., sertraline, escitalopram) due to favorable
side effect profile, safety in overdose, and efficacy. Sertraline is often preferred for its broad
spectrum (also effective in anxiety disorders). Amitriptyline (TCA) is second-line due to
anticholinergic effects and cardiac toxicity. Bupropion may be used if sexual side effects are a
concern but is less effective for anxiety. Lithium is for bipolar disorder. Benzodiazepines like
lorazepam are not antidepressants and carry dependence risk.

Question 2: A 28-year-old man presents with recurrent episodes of intense fear, palpitations,
chest pain, and shortness of breath lasting 10–15 minutes, occurring unexpectedly. He now
avoids leaving his home due to fear of having another episode. Which of the following is the
most likely diagnosis?



(A) Generalized anxiety disorder



(B) Panic disorder with agoraphobia



(C) Social anxiety disorder



(D) Post-traumatic stress disorder



(E) Obsessive-compulsive disorder


Correct Answer: (B) Panic disorder with agoraphobia


Rationale: Panic disorder is characterized by recurrent unexpected panic attacks followed by
≥1 month of persistent worry about future attacks or maladaptive behavior change (e.g.,
avoidance). Agoraphobia develops when patients avoid situations (e.g., crowds, public
transport) where escape might be difficult during an attack. GAD involves chronic excessive
worry about multiple domains. PTSD requires trauma exposure. OCD features obsessions and

,compulsions. First-line treatment includes SSRIs and cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) with
exposure.

Question 3: A 45-year-old man is brought in by his wife due to 2 weeks of elevated mood,
decreased need for sleep, pressured speech, grandiosity, and reckless spending. He has no prior
psychiatric history. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step?



(A) Start sertraline



(B) Start lithium



(C) Order TSH and basic metabolic panel



(D) Refer urgently to psychiatry



(E) Prescribe lorazepam as needed


Correct Answer: (D) Refer urgently to psychiatry


Rationale: This patient exhibits signs of acute mania (DSM-6 criteria: ≥1 week of abnormally
elevated/expansive mood with ≥3 symptoms such as decreased sleep, grandiosity, distractibility,
etc.). Mania is a medical emergency due to risk of harm, financial ruin, or psychosis. While labs
(TSH, BMP, drug screen) should be obtained to rule out medical causes (e.g., hyperthyroidism),
the priority is urgent psychiatric evaluation for possible hospitalization and initiation of mood
stabilizers (e.g., lithium, valproate) or atypical antipsychotics. Starting antidepressants
(sertraline) can worsen mania.

Question 4: A 22-year-old college student presents with intrusive thoughts about
contamination and spends 2–3 hours daily washing her hands, causing skin breakdown. She
recognizes the thoughts are excessive but cannot stop. Which of the following is the most
effective first-line treatment?



(A) Fluoxetine



(B) Exposure and response prevention (ERP) therapy

, (C) Clomipramine



(D) Risperidone



(E) Supportive counseling


Correct Answer: (B) Exposure and response prevention (ERP) therapy


Rationale: This describes obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). ERP, a form of CBT, is the
gold standard psychotherapy and first-line treatment for mild to moderate OCD. SSRIs (e.g.,
fluoxetine, sertraline) are also first-line and often combined with ERP for moderate-severe
cases. Clomipramine (a TCA) is effective but reserved due to side effects. Antipsychotics like
risperidone are adjuncts for treatment-resistant OCD. Supportive counseling alone is
insufficient.

Question 5: A 50-year-old man with alcohol use disorder presents with tremors, anxiety,
nausea, and diaphoresis 24 hours after his last drink. He is alert and oriented. CIWA-Ar score is
12. Which of the following is the most appropriate management?



(A) Discharge with outpatient follow-up



(B) Administer chlordiazepoxide and monitor



(C) Give haloperidol for agitation



(D) Start naltrexone



(E) Administer IV thiamine and glucose only


Correct Answer: (B) Administer chlordiazepoxide and monitor


Rationale: This patient is experiencing alcohol withdrawal. CIWA-Ar (Clinical Institute
Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol) score ≥10 indicates need for pharmacologic treatment.
Benzodiazepines (e.g., chlordiazepoxide, lorazepam) are first-line to prevent progression to
seizures or delirium tremens. Thiamine and glucose should be given before any carbohydrate to

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