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Med Aide / State Medication Aide Certification Examination | (Latest 2026/2027 Update) | Complete Exam Questions with Verified Answers and Detailed Rationales | MACE™ Content Outline | A+ Graded | NCSBN/Credentia

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INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD - This is the comprehensive State Certification Examination study guide for the Medication Aide 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 developed by Credentia Nurse Aide LLC and NCSBN. The MACE exam consists of 60 multiple-choice questions covering all four content domains, with test-takers required to achieve varying state-specific passing scores (e.g., 70% or higher). This guide follows the official MACE™ Test Plan and covers Authorized Duties (14% of exam) including building relationships, the role of the delegating/supervising nurse, permitted duties and restrictions, the process of delegation, and specific legal/ethical issues. Covers Medication Administration (40% of exam) including medication orders, documentation on MAR, storage and disposal requirements, safety and rights (6 Rights foundational, 7 Rights with Right Reason/Response), preparation techniques, administration by routes (oral, topical, eye, ear, nasal, inhalant, transdermal, vaginal, rectal), medication error prevention, factors affecting how the body uses medication (absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion), and drug classifications by body system. Covers Medication Concepts and Measurements (30% of exam) including terminology and abbreviations (BID, TID, QID, PO, AC, PC, PRN, SL, STAT, OS/OD/OU, HS, Q4H), dosage ranges, drug actions and implications, side effects (therapeutic, idiosyncratic, paradoxical, antagonist reactions), precautions, allergic and adverse reactions (anaphylaxis, wheezing as life-threatening), drug interactions, medication forms (liquid, solid, semi-solid), and mathematics/measurements (1 tsp = 5 mL, 1 oz = 30 mL, 1 tbsp = 15 mL). Covers Observation, Care and Reporting (16% of exam) including causes and reporting of medication errors, reporting of symptoms and side effects, reporting any change from client's normal condition, and location of resources and references (nurse, pharmacist, physician, package insert, drug reference manuals). Includes complete pharmacology coverage by body system as outlined in the MACE Exam Cram textbook: medications affecting the cardiovascular system (digoxin/Lanoxin check pulse, Lasix/furosemide potassium loss, nitroglycerin headache/hypotension, anticoagulants bleeding risk), respiratory system (albuterol bronchodilator for COPD/asthma, albuterol is a bronchodilator that opens airways and treats bronchospasm in asthma and COPD), digestive system (antacids separate 1 hour before/2 hours after other medications, NSAIDs GI bleed), antibiotics and anti-infective agents (sulfonamides most common UTI treatment, complete full course), urinary system, musculoskeletal system, central nervous system (psychotropics: akathisia pacing, tardive dyskinesia irreversible), endocrine system (Type 1 vs Type 2 diabetes, 3 P's polyphagia/polydipsia/polyuria, hypoglycemia vs hyperglycemia, insulin administration), eye and ear medications, cancer treatment medications, and medications for mental health disorders. Covers infection control and medical asepsis (hand hygiene as most effective prevention, standard/universal precautions, bloodborne pathogens Hepatitis B/C/HIV, PPE, biohazardous waste disposal), legal/ethical responsibilities (negligence failure to administer ordered medication, fraud falsifying MAR documentation, diversion theft of controlled substances, resident right to refuse medication absolute right, mandated reporters police/doctor/nurse/teacher/CNA), and skills performance checklists for medication administration procedures (pre-administration procedures, administration through various routes, special techniques, post-administration procedures). Medication Aide State Exam MACE certification exam Credentia medication aide test NCSBN MACE content outline Authorized Duties 14 percent exam Building relationships medication aide Role delegating supervising nurse Permitted duties medication aide Restrictions limitations medication aide Process of delegation Responsibility accepting delegation tasks Legal and ethical issues medication aide Medication Administration 40 percent exam Medication orders interpretation MAR medication administration record Documentation of medication administration Drug storage requirements Drug disposal regulations Safety medication administration Rights of medication administration Right Resident Right Medication Right Dose Right Route Right Time Right Documentation Right Reason Right Response Medication error prevention Routes of administration oral topical eye ear nasal Routes of administration inhalant transdermal vaginal rectal Factors affecting body uses medication Absorption distribution metabolism excretion Drug classifications body systems Antimicrobials cardiovascular endocrine respiratory Dermatological medications Rights of individuals Medication Concepts Measurements 30 percent exam Terminology abbreviations BID TID QID Terminology abbreviations PO AC PC PRN Terminology abbreviations SL STAT OS OD OU Terminology abbreviations HS hour of sleep Q4H every 4 hours SI in the cheek BUC under tongue Dosage range calculations Drug actions and implications Therapeutic effects Idiosyncratic reaction unpredictable Paradoxical reaction opposite expected Antagonist drug blocks another drug Precautions drug administration Allergic reactions immune system response Adverse reactions harmful unintended Anaphylaxis life threatening allergic reaction Wheezing airway closing life threatening sign Hives urticaria allergic reaction Medication interactions Liquid medication forms Solid medication forms Semi solid medication forms Weights and measures medication aide 1 tsp equals 5 mL 1 tbsp equals 15 mL 1 oz equals 30 mL 1 tbsp equals 3 tsp mL equals cc gm gram mg milligram mcg microgram gtt drop mEq milliequivalent Observation Care Reporting 16 percent exam Causes medication errors Reporting medication errors immediate supervisor Reporting symptoms and side effects Reporting change from client normal condition Location resources and references Nurse pharmacist physician resources Package insert drug reference manuals Cardiovascular medications digoxin Lanoxin Check pulse before administering digoxin Lasix furosemide potassium loss side effect Nitroglycerin headache hypotension orthostatic hypotension Anticoagulants Coumadin warfarin bleeding risk Respiratory medications albuterol bronchodilator Albuterol treats COPD asthma bronchospasm Gastrointestinal medications antacids Antacids separate 1 hour before 2 hours after other medications Antibiotics sulfonamides most common UTI treatment Antibiotics complete full course do not miss doses Antibiotics allergic reactions common Endocrine medications diabetes Type 1 Type 1 diabetes no insulin produced Type 1 diabetes always requires insulin injections Type 1 diabetes cannot be prevented Type 2 diabetes insulin resistance deficiency Type 2 diabetes can be prevented healthy diet exercise 3 P's polyphagia polydipsia polyuria Hypoglycemia low blood sugar symptoms Hyperglycemia high blood sugar symptoms Insulin administration technique Central nervous system medications psychotropics Antidepressants antianxiety antipsychotics Akathisia pacing unable sit still neuroleptic side effect Tardive dyskinesia irreversible neurological side effect Dystonia abnormal muscle tone repetitive contractions Bradykinesia very slow movement Ataxia irregular muscular action Infection control medical asepsis Hand hygiene most effective infection prevention Standard universal precautions all patients Bloodborne pathogens Hepatitis B Hepatitis C HIV Personal Protective Equipment PPE gloves gown mask Biohazardous waste disposal special containers Legal responsibilities medication aide Negligence failure to administer ordered medication Fraud falsifying MAR documentation Diversion theft controlled substances for personal use Resident right to refuse medication absolute right Mandated reporters police doctor nurse teacher CNA Employee misconduct registry Skills performance checklist medication administration Pre administration procedures medication aide Post administration procedures medication aide Credentia customer support Support Credentia com A+ Grade Medication Aide Study Guide

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Medication Aide Certification




MAXE EDIA-DEM
CMA
State Board of Nursing · Med-Aide 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-Aide Examination
B O DY SYST E M S · D R U G C L A SS I F I C AT I O N S · A B B R E V I AT I O N S · S A F E TY · V I TA L S I G N S · R O U T E S

INSTITUTION State Medication Aide Certification Board COURSE CODE MA-EXAM-2026
PROGRAM Certified Medication Aide (CMA) · Long- ACADEMIC YEAR
Term Care
EXAM TITLE Medication Aide — Comprehensive TOTAL QUESTIONS 50 Questions
Examination
COURSE TITLE Medication Administration · Body Systems FORMAT Multiple Choice / Fill-in-the-Blank —
· Drug Classifications · Safety & Select the Single Best Answer
Documentation


EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Questions cover body systems, drug classifications, medical abbreviations, medication safety, vital signs, and routes of
administration.
▸ Select the single best answer for each question based on medication aide certification curriculum.
▸ Pay careful attention to medication error procedures, scope of practice, and assessment parameters.
▸ Correct answers and detailed rationales appear below each question for comprehensive exam preparation.


BODY SYSTEMS · DRUG CLASSIFICATIONS · ABBREVIATIONS · SAFETY · Questions 1
VITAL SIGNS · ROUTES – 50

1. You are asked by a CNA to give a resident his pain medication. As the Medication Aide, who should give further
clarification about the resident's request?
A. The CNA who made the request
B. The resident—assess the resident directly to understand their pain and need
C. The nurse supervisor only
D. Give the medication based on the CNA's report without further clarification
CORRECT ANSWER B. The resident—assess the resident directly to understand their pain and need

RATIONALE The medication aide must communicate directly with the resident to assess their pain level, location, and
need for PRN medication. The CNA's report is valuable collateral information, but the aide must personally
evaluate the resident before administering any PRN medication. The resident is the primary source of
information about their own pain and symptoms.

, 2. What information should be located on the MAR?
A. Only the client's name and room number
B. Medication dose, route, time, client name, allergies, physician name, and special instructions
C. Only the pharmacy phone number
D. The cost of each medication
CORRECT ANSWER B. Medication dose, route, time, client name, allergies, physician name, and special instructions

RATIONALE The MAR is the legal document guiding medication administration. It includes: client's name, room/bed
number, allergies, physician's name, medication name, dose/strength, route, time for administration, date
order was written, expiration date, special instructions, and reason for PRN medications. Cost (Option D) is
not a clinical parameter and does not appear on the MAR.


3. Where should a transdermal patch be applied?
A. Over a bony prominence
B. On a hairless area of intact skin
C. On the same site as the previous patch
D. Over an open wound for faster absorption
CORRECT ANSWER B. On a hairless area of intact skin

RATIONALE Transdermal patches must be applied to clean, dry, hairless, intact skin for proper adhesion and absorption.
Hair interferes with skin contact; bony prominences may cause discomfort and poor adhesion. Sites must be
rotated to prevent skin irritation. The old patch must be removed, folded adhesive sides together, and
disposed of per policy before applying the new patch. Wear gloves during application and removal.


4. Why is it important for a Medication Aide to introduce themselves to residents?
A. To build relationships with the residents and establish trust
B. It is not necessary—the residents already know the staff
C. Only to comply with facility policy
D. To announce that medications are being distributed
CORRECT ANSWER A. To build relationships with the residents and establish trust

RATIONALE Introducing oneself builds rapport, trust, and person-centered care. Residents feel respected and valued
when staff acknowledge them as individuals. This relationship facilitates communication—residents are more
likely to report symptoms, ask questions, and express concerns to a medication aide they know and trust. It
also supports resident rights and dignity.


5. The Medication Aide is responsible for administering medications:
A. Independently without oversight
B. Under the direct supervision of a nurse
C. Only when the physician is present
D. Under the supervision of the pharmacist
CORRECT ANSWER B. Under the direct supervision of a nurse

RATIONALE Medication aides always work under the delegation and supervision of a licensed nurse (RN or LPN). They do
not practice independently. The supervising nurse is responsible for assessment, care planning, and directing
the aide's activities. The aide administers medications exactly as ordered on the MAR and reports changes
and concerns to the nurse.

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Subido en
30 de mayo de 2026
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Escrito en
2025/2026
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