EXAM 2026/2027 | Complete Practice Exam | Verified
Answers | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
Section 1: Healthcare Industry Fundamentals & Delivery Systems (15
Questions)
Q1: A health system is evaluating its service portfolio across the care continuum. Which
of the following correctly represents the progression from least to most intensive care
setting?
A. Skilled nursing facility → Inpatient rehabilitation → Long-term acute care hospital →
Hospice care [CORRECT]
B. Hospice care → Skilled nursing facility → Long-term acute care hospital → Inpatient
rehabilitation
C. Long-term acute care hospital → Skilled nursing facility → Inpatient rehabilitation →
Hospice care
D. Inpatient rehabilitation → Long-term acute care hospital → Skilled nursing facility →
Hospice care
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The care continuum progresses from subacute (skilled nursing) to acute
rehabilitation (inpatient rehab) to highly complex medical management (LTACH) to
end-of-life comfort care (hospice). Option B reverses the intensity progression entirely.
Option C incorrectly places LTACH before SNF. Option D incorrectly places inpatient
rehabilitation as the least intensive setting. Understanding this progression is essential
,for healthcare BI professionals analyzing patient flow and capacity planning. HFMA
CSBI Domain: Healthcare Industry Fundamentals & Delivery Systems
Q2: A business intelligence analyst is mapping payer types for a regional health system.
Which payer classification is MOST likely to exhibit the highest degree of prior
authorization requirements and narrow network restrictions?
A. Traditional Medicare Fee-for-Service
B. Commercial indemnity insurance
C. Medicare Advantage (MA) plan [CORRECT]
D. State Medicaid Fee-for-Service
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Medicare Advantage plans, administered by private insurers under Medicare
contracts, typically impose the most restrictive prior authorization requirements and
narrow provider networks to control costs—unlike traditional Medicare FFS which has
minimal authorization requirements. Commercial indemnity plans (B) offer the broadest
provider choice. Traditional Medicare (A) and Medicaid FFS (D) have standardized, less
restrictive access rules. BI analysts must understand these payer behavioral differences
when modeling revenue cycle and access metrics. HFMA CSBI Domain: Healthcare
Industry Fundamentals & Delivery Systems
Q3: A hospital's BI team is analyzing post-acute care transitions. A patient discharged
after hip replacement surgery requires wound care and physical therapy but does not
need 24-hour skilled nursing supervision. Which post-acute setting is MOST
appropriate?
A. Long-term acute care hospital (LTACH)
B. Inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF)
C. Home health agency [CORRECT]
,D. Skilled nursing facility (SNF)
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Home health agencies provide intermittent skilled services (wound care, PT)
in the patient's residence without requiring 24-hour onsite supervision—matching this
patient's needs. LTACHs (A) serve patients with complex medical conditions requiring
extended acute-level care. IRFs (B) require intensive rehabilitation (typically 3
hours/day). SNFs (D) provide 24-hour skilled nursing care, which exceeds this patient's
requirements. BI professionals use such care setting distinctions to optimize discharge
planning analytics and reduce unnecessary readmissions. HFMA CSBI Domain:
Healthcare Industry Fundamentals & Delivery Systems
Q4: A healthcare analytics director is asked to differentiate "provider-centric" from
"patient-centric" care delivery for a board presentation. Which of the following BEST
describes a patient-centric care delivery model?
A. Care organized around physician specialty silos with patients routed to the
appropriate specialist based on diagnosis
B. Care organized around hospital revenue centers with services optimized for
maximum reimbursement capture
C. Care organized around the patient's comprehensive needs, preferences, and goals,
with coordinated services across settings and disciplines [CORRECT]
D. Care organized around standardized clinical protocols applied uniformly regardless
of patient social context
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Patient-centric care places the patient at the center of care design,
integrating their preferences, social determinants, and goals across the care
continuum—contrasting with provider-centric models (A, B) that organize around
institutional structures or reimbursement optimization. Option D describes
protocol-driven care that may ignore individual patient context. BI professionals must
, understand these models to design analytics that measure patient-reported outcomes
and experience, not just volume and revenue. HFMA CSBI Domain: Healthcare Industry
Fundamentals & Delivery Systems
Q5: A health system is implementing a new analytics platform to track patients across
the care continuum. Which combination of care settings represents the FULL continuum
from wellness to end-of-life?
A. Primary care clinic → Urgent care → Emergency department → Inpatient hospital →
Hospice
B. Wellness/prevention → Primary care → Acute care hospital → Post-acute care →
Palliative/hospice care [CORRECT]
C. Emergency department → Inpatient hospital → Skilled nursing facility → Home
health → Hospice
D. Telehealth → Ambulatory surgery center → Inpatient hospital → Rehabilitation →
Long-term care
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The complete care continuum begins with wellness and prevention (the
upstream health maintenance phase), progresses through primary, acute, and
post-acute care, and concludes with palliative/hospice end-of-life services. Option A
omits wellness/prevention and palliative care. Option C begins at the emergency
department, missing upstream care entirely. Option D substitutes telehealth for
wellness and omits hospice, creating an incomplete picture. BI analysts must map the
full continuum to identify gaps in care access and transitions. HFMA CSBI Domain:
Healthcare Industry Fundamentals & Delivery Systems
Q6: A rural health system is evaluating partnerships to expand access. Which care
delivery model MOST directly addresses geographic barriers and provider shortages in
underserved communities?