(Vol.1 & Vol.2)
22nd Edition
• Author(s)Joseph Loscalzo; Anthony S.
Fauci; Dennis L. Kasper; Stephen Hauser;
Dan Longo; J. Larry Jameson
Test Bank
Covered
PART 1: Foundations of Clinical Medicine
PART 2: Cardinal Symptoms & Clinical Presentations
PART 3: Clinical Pharmacology
PART 4: Oncology & Hematology
PART 5: Infectious Diseases
PART 6: Cardiovascular Disorders
PART 7: Respiratory Disorders
PART 8: Critical Care Medicine
PART 9: Kidney & Urinary Tract Disorders
PART 10: Gastrointestinal & Hepatobiliary Disorders
,PART 11: Immune-Mediated & Rheumatologic Disorders
PART 12: Endocrinology & Metabolism
PART 13: Neurologic & Psychiatric Disorders
PART 14: Toxicology & Environmental Injury
PART 15: Environmental & Occupational Medicine
PART 16: Genetics, Precision & Systems Medicine
PART 17–20: Special & Emerging Topics
1. (Chapter 1 — The Practice of Medicine) A 68-year-old
patient asks why the physician orders molecular tests in
addition to a physical exam. Which statement best explains
the current role of molecular testing in practice?
A. Molecular tests replace the need for a focused history
and exam.
B. Molecular tests primarily confirm diagnoses that are
already certain from exam alone.
C. Molecular tests complement clinical evaluation by
clarifying diagnosis and guiding targeted therapy.
D. Molecular testing is used only for research and not for
routine clinical decisions.
Answer: C
Rationale: Modern practice integrates molecular data with
history/exam to refine diagnosis and target treatment; it is
complementary, not a replacement.
,2. (Chapter 2 — Promoting Good Health) Which preventive
action is the highest priority for reducing population
disease burden?
A. Increasing tertiary care capacity.
B. Implementing effective primary prevention strategies.
C. Expanding palliative care services.
D. Mandating hospital-acquired infection reporting.
Answer: B
Rationale: Primary prevention (reducing incidence) yields
the greatest population health benefit when feasible.
3. (Chapter 3 — Vaccine Opposition and Hesitancy) A nurse
encounters a hesitant parent. According to the chapter,
which approach is most likely to increase vaccine uptake?
A. Presenting long lists of statistical data.
B. Giving an ambiguous recommendation and leaving the
choice to the parent.
C. Making a strong, clear recommendation as a trusted
health professional.
D. Refusing care until vaccination is accepted.
Answer: C
Rationale: An unambiguous, strong recommendation from
a trusted clinician is a key determinant in persuading
vaccine-hesitant patients.
, 4. (Chapter 3 — Vaccine Opposition and Hesitancy) Which
factor is described as a common determinant of vaccine
hesitancy?
A. Universal access to care.
B. High confidence in public health institutions.
C. Concerns about vaccine safety and mistrust of
authorities.
D. Mandatory vaccination laws only.
Answer: C
Rationale: Hesitancy is multifactorial; safety concerns and
mistrust are central drivers.
5. (Chapter 4 — Decision-Making in Clinical Medicine) When
ordering diagnostic tests, the nurse should prioritize:
A. Tests that are maximal in number to avoid missed
diagnoses.
B. Tests guided by pretest probability and how results will
change management.
C. The cheapest available tests regardless of accuracy.
D. Tests requested by the patient even if low yield.
Answer: B
Rationale: Rational test use depends on pretest probability
and whether results will affect clinical decisions.
6. (Chapter 4 — Decision-Making in Clinical Medicine) Which
cognitive strategy reduces diagnostic error by countering