Page 1 of 129
WHNP BOARDS 2026 EXAM BANK ALL COMPLETE (561)
CURRENT TESTING QUESTIONS AND DETAILED CORRECT
ANSWERS (VERIFIED) TOP-RATED A+.
WHNP
What is EBP? ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... The delivery of
individualized healthcare on the basis of an awareness of the
impact and strength of related scientific evidence
When can you treat a minor without parental consent? ✓ ✓......
ANSWER ....... pregnant and consents to treatment related
to pregnancy, other than abortion
consent to diagnosis and treatment of STDS that must be
reported to Texas Dept of health
consent to examination or treatment for chemical addiction,
dependency, or any other condition related to chemical use
consent for counseling for suicide prevention, chemical addiction
or dependency, pr for sexual, physical or emotional abuse
***Parental consent is not required for minors to receive
information about family planning. Texas laws require minors to
get parental permission to receive contraception. When parental
consent is required the parent must sign both the general consent
for treatment and method specific consent for for a prescription
method of contraception.
, Page 2 of 129
Under federal law, minors may give consent and receive
confidential family planning services if the funding source is
Medicaid or Title Family Planning Program
MVP S&S ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... CO usually
uncompromised - usually goes unnoticed by patient
TYPICALLY BENIGN
tugging chest pain, dyspnea if severe regurge, can have
tachycardia or palpitations
Cardiac exam in MVP ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... presence of
a Grade I-III/IV mid to late systolic crescendo murmur with
honking quality during peak pressure, which is the middle of
systole
Normal PMI
Best indicator for asthma flare ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
FEV
Necessary for diagnosis of HTN ✓ ✓......
ANSWER ....... >2 abnormal readings on >2 occasions
highest to lowest level of research ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
meta analysis
, Page 3 of 129
systemic reviews
RCTs
Cohort studies
case-controlled studies
case series, case reports
editorial, expert opinion
Definition of primary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
preventing the health problem, the most cost-effective from of
healthcare
examples of primary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
immunizations, counseling, helmet, seat belt, condom
Definition of secondary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
Detecting disease in early asymptomatic, or preclinical state
examples of secondary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
screening tests - BP, mammo, colonoscopy, pap smear, skin
survey
definition of tertiary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
minimizing negative disease induced outcomes; a failure of
primary prevention
, Page 4 of 129
examples of tertiary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
adjusting therapy to avoid further target damage
congenital rubella ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... extremely
teratogenic can lead to developmental disability, blindness,
hearing loss
Should immunization be deferred in presence of minor illness ✓
✓...... ANSWER ....... no, immunization should be deferred
only in the presence of a moderate to severe illness with or
without fever
What should be available if administering vaccines ✓ ✓......
ANSWER ....... telephone to call 911 and epipen
When are babies fully vaccinated against pertussis ✓ ✓......
ANSWER ....... 6 months
contraindicatons to live vaccines ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
pregnancy, immune suppression (HIV)
Examples of live vaccines ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... MMR,
varicella, zoster, intranasal influenza
WHNP BOARDS 2026 EXAM BANK ALL COMPLETE (561)
CURRENT TESTING QUESTIONS AND DETAILED CORRECT
ANSWERS (VERIFIED) TOP-RATED A+.
WHNP
What is EBP? ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... The delivery of
individualized healthcare on the basis of an awareness of the
impact and strength of related scientific evidence
When can you treat a minor without parental consent? ✓ ✓......
ANSWER ....... pregnant and consents to treatment related
to pregnancy, other than abortion
consent to diagnosis and treatment of STDS that must be
reported to Texas Dept of health
consent to examination or treatment for chemical addiction,
dependency, or any other condition related to chemical use
consent for counseling for suicide prevention, chemical addiction
or dependency, pr for sexual, physical or emotional abuse
***Parental consent is not required for minors to receive
information about family planning. Texas laws require minors to
get parental permission to receive contraception. When parental
consent is required the parent must sign both the general consent
for treatment and method specific consent for for a prescription
method of contraception.
, Page 2 of 129
Under federal law, minors may give consent and receive
confidential family planning services if the funding source is
Medicaid or Title Family Planning Program
MVP S&S ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... CO usually
uncompromised - usually goes unnoticed by patient
TYPICALLY BENIGN
tugging chest pain, dyspnea if severe regurge, can have
tachycardia or palpitations
Cardiac exam in MVP ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... presence of
a Grade I-III/IV mid to late systolic crescendo murmur with
honking quality during peak pressure, which is the middle of
systole
Normal PMI
Best indicator for asthma flare ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
FEV
Necessary for diagnosis of HTN ✓ ✓......
ANSWER ....... >2 abnormal readings on >2 occasions
highest to lowest level of research ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
meta analysis
, Page 3 of 129
systemic reviews
RCTs
Cohort studies
case-controlled studies
case series, case reports
editorial, expert opinion
Definition of primary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
preventing the health problem, the most cost-effective from of
healthcare
examples of primary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
immunizations, counseling, helmet, seat belt, condom
Definition of secondary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
Detecting disease in early asymptomatic, or preclinical state
examples of secondary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
screening tests - BP, mammo, colonoscopy, pap smear, skin
survey
definition of tertiary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
minimizing negative disease induced outcomes; a failure of
primary prevention
, Page 4 of 129
examples of tertiary prevention ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
adjusting therapy to avoid further target damage
congenital rubella ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... extremely
teratogenic can lead to developmental disability, blindness,
hearing loss
Should immunization be deferred in presence of minor illness ✓
✓...... ANSWER ....... no, immunization should be deferred
only in the presence of a moderate to severe illness with or
without fever
What should be available if administering vaccines ✓ ✓......
ANSWER ....... telephone to call 911 and epipen
When are babies fully vaccinated against pertussis ✓ ✓......
ANSWER ....... 6 months
contraindicatons to live vaccines ✓ ✓...... ANSWER .......
pregnancy, immune suppression (HIV)
Examples of live vaccines ✓ ✓...... ANSWER ....... MMR,
varicella, zoster, intranasal influenza