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Med Tech / Medication Aide State Exam Certification | (Latest 2026/2027 Update) | Complete Exam Questions with Verified Answers and Detailed Rationales | Scope of Practice | A+ Graded | State Medication Aide Certification Board

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Subido en
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Escrito en
2025/2026

INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD - This is the comprehensive State Certification Examination study guide for the Medication Aide / Med Tech certification exam (Latest 2026/2027 Update), featuring verified exam questions with correct answers and detailed rationales aligned with the National Medication Aide Certification Examination (MACE™) content outline and state board standards. This guide covers all core competency areas tested on the State Medication Aide Certification Exam. Includes Scope of Practice – administration of oral, eye, ear, nasal, inhalant, transdermal, topical, vaginal, and rectal medications; strict prohibition of subcutaneous, intradermal, and intramuscular injections; prohibition of independent dosage calculation; PRN medications require licensed nurse assessment and authorization; G-tube/J-tube administration requires physician order . Medication Administration Rights – 6 Rights (Right Resident, Medication, Dose, Route, Time, Documentation) per Texas HHSC and most state boards; the 7 Rights adds Right Reason; 8 Rights adds Right Response . Medication Errors & Legal Concepts – Immediate reporting when error occurs; negligence (failure to administer ordered medication); fraud (falsifying MAR); diversion (theft of controlled substances); residents have absolute Right to Refuse medication; documented refusal must be reported to nurse . Abbreviations & Conversions – qid (4 times daily), bid (2 times daily), tid (3 times daily), QOD (every other day), PC (after meals), AC (before meals), PRN (as needed), SL (sublingual), OS (left eye), OU (both eyes), OD (right eye), 1 tsp = 5 mL, 1 oz = 30 mL, 1 Tbsp = 15 mL . Pharmacology & High-Risk Medications – Digoxin/Lanoxin (heart stimulant, check apical pulse before administration); Lasix (diuretic, side effect: potassium loss); Antacids (take 1 hour before or 2 hours after other medications to prevent absorption interference); Nitroglycerin (vasodilator, side effects: headache, hypotension); Albuterol (bronchodilator for COPD/asthma bronchospasm); Sulfonamides (most common UTI treatment); NSAIDs (serious side effect: GI bleed) . Medication Administration Techniques – Sublingual (under tongue, avoid food/fluids until dissolved); Enteric-coated tablets (irritating to stomach, do not crush); Suspension liquids (shake before use); Transdermal patches (apply to hairless site, date on removal); Eye drops adult administration (pull lower lid, avoid dropper touching eye, 1 minute pressure to lacrimal sac); Ear drops adult (pull pinna upward and outward, remain in position 5 minutes); Ear drops children (pull pinna down and back); Nasal spray (clean nozzle with tissue after each use) . Infection Control – Hand hygiene (most effective infection prevention measure); Chain of infection (pathogen, reservoir, portal of exit, transmission, portal of entry, susceptible host); Standard universal precautions for all patients; Nosocomial infection (hospital-acquired, occurs after admission) . Anaphylaxis & Emergency Recognition – Wheezing (airway closing, life-threatening sign), anaphylactic reaction requires immediate emergency response; hives (raised irregular patches) may indicate allergic reaction; systemic infection signs (fever, elevated pulse, malaise, anorexia, elevated WBCs) . Legal & Regulatory Standards – HHSC maintains employee misconduct registry for prohibited individuals ; Initial medication aide permit valid for 12 months ; Medication errors threshold at 5% or less ; Recertification requires annual in-service education . Med Tech State Exam Medication Aide State Certification Test QMA State Test Qualified Medication Aide State Medication Aide Board Exam MACE certification exam Six Rights medication administration Right Resident Right Medication Right Dose Right Route Right Time Right Documentation PRN medication requires nurse assessment G tube J tube medication administration physician order Scope of Practice oral eye ear nasal inhalant Scope of Practice transdermal topical vaginal rectal Prohibited tasks subcutaneous injection IM injection Prohibited tasks intravenous medication Prohibited tasks independent dosage calculation State approved training program MACE exam Certified Medication Aide CMA vs Med Tech Medication Aide permit renewal 12 months Texas HHSC medication aide regulations Nurse Aide Registry NAR Employee Misconduct Registry HHSC Medication error reporting immediate supervisor Negligence failure to administer ordered medication Fraud falsifying MAR documentation Diversion theft controlled substances Resident Right to Refuse medication three attempts Document refusal inform licensed nurse 1 teaspoon equals 5 mL 1 tablespoon equals 15 mL 1 ounce equals 30 mL qid four times daily evenly spaced bid two times daily tid three times daily QOD every other day PC after meals AC before meals PO by mouth PRN as needed SL sublingual STAT immediately OS left eye OU both eyes OD right eye Digoxin Lanoxin check pulse before administration Lasix furosemide diuretic potassium loss Antacids take 1 hour before or 2 hours after other medications Nitroglycerin vasodilator headache hypotension Albuterol bronchodilator COPD bronchospasm Sulfonamides UTI most common treatment NSAIDs GI bleed serious adverse effect Warfarin Coumadin anticoagulant monitor bleeding Hypoglycemics Micronase diabetes medication MAO inhibitors contraindicated cheese liver red wine Sedative hypnotics induce sleep Sublingual absorption begins in mouth avoid food fluids Enteric coated tablet do not crush irritating stomach Suspension shake before use particle distribution Transdermal patch hairless site date on removal Eye drops adult pull lower lid avoid touching dropper Pressure lacrimal sac 1 minute after eye drops Ear drops adult pull pinna upward outward Ear drops child pull pinna down back Remain positioned 5 minutes after ear drops Nasal spray clean nozzle tissue after use Hand hygiene most effective infection prevention Chain of infection pathogen reservoir portal of exit Chain of infection transmission portal of entry susceptible host Standard universal precautions all patients Nosocomial infection acquired after hospital admission Anaphylaxis wheezing airway closing life threatening Hives urticaria raised irregular patches allergic reaction Systemic infection signs fever elevated pulse malaise anorexia Oxygen saturation SpO2 normal 95-100 percent A+ Grade Med Tech Study Guide

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Medication Aide Certification




MAXE HCET DEM
CMA
State Board of Nursing · Med Tech State Examination
S A F E M E D I C AT I O N P R A C T I C E S · Q U A L I T Y R E S I D E N T C A R E
STATE EXAM




Med Tech State Exam
S I X R I G H TS · M E D I C AT I O N F O R M S · R O U T E S · S A F E TY · A B B R E V I AT I O N S · L E G A L & E T H I C A L
PRACTICE

INSTITUTION State Medication Aide / Med Tech COURSE CODE MT-STATE-2026
Certification Board
PROGRAM Certified Medication Technician · Long- ACADEMIC YEAR
Term Care / Assisted Living
EXAM TITLE Medication Technician — State TOTAL QUESTIONS 40 Questions
Examination Review
COURSE TITLE Medication Administration for Unlicensed FORMAT Multiple Choice / True-False — Select the
Personnel · Comprehensive State Exam Single Best Answer
Preparation


EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Questions cover the six rights, medication forms, routes of administration, safety protocols, medical abbreviations, legal/ethical
practice, and roles of healthcare team members.
▸ Select the single best answer for each question based on state medication aide/technician certification curriculum.
▸ Pay careful attention to situations requiring immediate supervisor notification and prohibited tasks.
▸ Correct answers and detailed rationales appear below each question for comprehensive exam preparation.


SIX RIGHTS · MEDICATION FORMS · ROUTES · SAFETY · ABBREVIATIONS · Questions 1
LEGAL/ETHICAL PRACTICE – 40

1. What are the six rights of medication administration?
A. Right client, right diagnosis, right pharmacy, right insurance, right date, right signature
B. Right client, right medication, right dose, right route, right time, right documentation
C. Right client, right medication, right dose, right route, right time, right supervisor
D. Right medication, right dose, right route, right time, right documentation, right diagnosis
CORRECT ANSWER B. Right client, right medication, right dose, right route, right time, right documentation

RATIONALE The six rights are the foundation of safe medication administration and must be performed for every
medication, for every client, every time. Never give medications from memory—always refer to the MAR. If the
client raises a question about a medication, treat this as a RED FLAG—stop and re-check the MAR before
administering.

, 2. Do medication aides perform assessments or make decisions about medications they are administering?
A. Yes, medication aides are trained to assess and make independent decisions
B. No—they should refer any client questions about medications to their supervisor, primary physician, and pharmacist
C. Yes, but only for over-the-counter medications
D. Only on weekends when the supervisor is not available
CORRECT ANSWER B. No—they should refer any client questions about medications to their supervisor, primary
physician, and pharmacist
RATIONALE Medication aides do NOT perform assessments or make independent decisions about medications. They
administer medications as ordered on the MAR under the supervision of a licensed nurse. Client questions
about medications—why they take them, side effects, interactions—must be referred to the supervisor,
physician, or pharmacist. The aide's role is safe administration, documentation, and reporting.


3. What should a medication aide do if a client has difficulty because of a medication?
A. Adjust the dose and continue monitoring
B. Alert the supervisor immediately and follow agency protocol
C. Document the difficulty and tell the client to mention it at their next doctor's appointment
D. Discontinue the medication and notify the pharmacy
CORRECT ANSWER B. Alert the supervisor immediately and follow agency protocol

RATIONALE If a client experiences difficulty after taking a medication—dizziness, nausea, rash, change in condition—the
medication aide must immediately notify the supervisor. The aide does not adjust doses, discontinue
medications, or make clinical decisions. Prompt reporting ensures timely assessment and intervention,
potentially preventing serious adverse outcomes.


4. What information is included on the MAR (Medication Administration Record)?
A. Only the client's name and medication name
B. Client's name, allergies, physician's name, medication name and dosage, route, and time for administration
C. Only the medication name and time
D. The client's insurance information and pharmacy phone number
CORRECT ANSWER B. Client's name, allergies, physician's name, medication name and dosage, route, and time for
administration
RATIONALE The MAR is the legal document guiding medication administration. It must include: client's name, room/bed
number, agency number, medication name, strength/dose, date/time to be given, route, date the order was
written, date the order expires, client's allergies, special instructions, reason for PRN medications, and initials
of personnel transcribing the order. The medication aide follows the MAR exactly—never from memory.

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Subido en
29 de mayo de 2026
Número de páginas
14
Escrito en
2025/2026
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