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[Section 1: Legal & Ethical Responsibilities of Medication Aide (Q1-12)]
Q1. A medication aide is asked by a licensed nurse to administer an oral antibiotic to a
resident. Under standard scope of practice, the medication aide may legally administer:
A. Intravenous antibiotics with nurse supervision
B. Oral medications that have been properly set up and verified by the delegating nurse
C. Injectable insulin after completing a brief training module
D. Chemotherapy agents with a physician's verbal order
Correct Answer: B. Oral medications that have been properly set up and verified by the
delegating nurse [CORRECT]
Rationale: Medication aides are authorized to administer oral, topical, and other
non-invasive routes within their scope after nurse verification; IV therapy, injections, and
chemotherapy exceed this scope. A and C describe invasive routes reserved for
licensed personnel, and D involves high-risk medications outside aide authority.
Correct Answer: B
Q2. During a morning shift, a family member asks the medication aide to give an extra
dose of acetaminophen because the resident has a headache. The medication aide
should:
,A. Give the dose since it is a common over-the-counter medication
B. Refuse and notify the delegating nurse immediately
C. Give the dose but document it as a PRN medication
D. Tell the family member to administer it themselves
Correct Answer: B. Refuse and notify the delegating nurse immediately [CORRECT]
Rationale: Medication aides cannot administer medications without a valid order and
proper verification; any unauthorized request must be escalated to the delegating nurse.
A and C violate scope and safety protocols, and D improperly delegates responsibility to
an unlicensed individual.
Correct Answer: B
Q3. A medication aide is preparing to administer a 9:00 AM medication. Before giving
the medication, the aide verifies the resident's name band, the medication label, the
dose, the route, the time, and documents in the MAR. These actions represent the:
A. Five Rights of medication administration
B. Six Rights of medication administration
C. Seven Rights of medication administration
D. Three Checks of medication administration
Correct Answer: B. Six Rights of medication administration [CORRECT]
Rationale: The Six Rights include right patient, drug, dose, route, time, and
documentation; the aide performed all six. A undercounts, C adds rights not universally
included in the core six, and D refers to a different verification system.
,Correct Answer: B
Q4. A resident states they do not want to take their prescribed blood pressure
medication because they feel fine. The medication aide recognizes this situation as the
resident exercising their:
A. Right to autonomy and right to refuse medication
B. Right to self-medicate with alternative therapies
C. Right to modify the prescribed dose
D. Right to discontinue the medication permanently
Correct Answer: A. Right to autonomy and right to refuse medication [CORRECT]
Rationale: The additional rights include the right to refuse, which must be respected,
documented, and reported to the nurse; residents cannot unilaterally modify doses or
discontinue orders. B and C exceed patient authority, and D requires physician
involvement.
Correct Answer: A
Q5. A delegating nurse sets up medications for a medication aide and remains on the
unit during administration. The nurse's presence is required because:
A. The medication aide is legally independent and does not need supervision
B. The delegating nurse retains accountability for the appropriateness and safety of
medication administration
C. The nurse is only required for the first week of employment
D. State regulations allow medication aides to practice without any licensed oversight
, Correct Answer: B. The delegating nurse retains accountability for the appropriateness
and safety of medication administration [CORRECT]
Rationale: Delegation does not transfer accountability; the licensed nurse remains
responsible for assessment, judgment, and oversight of the medication aide's practice.
A and D contradict delegation principles, and C understates the ongoing supervisory
requirement.
Correct Answer: B
Q6. A medication aide transfers from State A to State B and discovers that State B
requires additional training hours and a separate state competency examination before
administering medications. The aide should:
A. Begin administering medications immediately using the State A certification
B. Complete the required State B training and examination before administering any
medications
C. Administer only oral medications while waiting for the new certification
D. Ask the facility to waive the requirement based on prior experience
Correct Answer: B. Complete the required State B training and examination before
administering any medications [CORRECT]
Rationale: Medication aide scope, training, and certification requirements vary by state;
practicing without proper state authorization constitutes practicing outside scope and
may violate state nurse practice acts. A, C, and D all involve unauthorized practice.
Correct Answer: B