AND CORRECT AND CORRECT ANSWERS WITH
RATIONALE ALREADY GRADED A+
This 200-question multiple-choice exam provides a comprehensive assessment
of the Illinois MPJE (Multistate Pharmacy Jurisprudence Examination) as
covered in Rickert study materials. It systematically covers federal controlled
substances laws (DEA registration, scheduling, order forms, recordkeeping),
Illinois-specific pharmacy regulations (Board of Pharmacy, licensure,
continuing education, scope of practice), prescribing authorities (APNs, PAs,
optometrists, psychologists), pharmacy operations (counseling, technician
duties, security, sanitation), and methamphetamine precursor controls
(pseudoephedrine/ephedrine restrictions). Each question presents four
plausible options with a single correct answer and a detailed rationale
explaining the legal statute, regulatory requirement, or practice standard.
This rigorous format tests practical pharmacy law knowledge, reinforces
compliance, and prepares candidates for Illinois MPJE success.
1. What does registration of the closed system of distribution mean for controlled
substances?
A) Only pharmacists must be registered with the DEA
B) All who come in contact with controlled substances must be registered, except
patients with a valid prescription
C) Only manufacturers and distributors must register
D) Registration is optional for pharmacies handling Schedule V drugs
Answer: B) All who come in contact with controlled substances must be registered,
except patients with a valid prescription
Rationale: The closed system of distribution requires that all persons who
manufacture, distribute, or dispense controlled substances must be registered with
the DEA. The patient is the exception, as they access the medication through a
valid prescription.
2. What are the exceptions to the rule that a controlled substance cannot be
returned to the pharmacy once it leaves the closed system?
A) Patient changes their mind and wants to return the medication
B) Dispensing error, drug recall, or pharmacy is an authorized collector
,C) The prescriber cancels the prescription
D) The patient no longer needs the medication
Answer: B) Dispensing error, drug recall, or pharmacy is an authorized collector
Rationale: Once a controlled substance leaves the pharmacy, it cannot be returned
unless there has been a dispensing error, a drug recall, or the pharmacy is
registered as an authorized collector for take-back programs.
3. Which organizations are responsible for monitoring and enforcing the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act?
A) DEA and FDA only
B) Department of Human Services, Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse,
and Department of Financial and Professional Regulation
C) Illinois State Police and local law enforcement
D) Board of Pharmacy only
Answer: B) Department of Human Services, Office of Alcoholism and Substance
Abuse, and Department of Financial and Professional Regulation
Rationale: In Illinois, the enforcement of the Controlled Substances Act is shared
by the Department of Human Services, the Office of Alcoholism and Substance
Abuse, and the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation.
4. What did the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970
accomplish?
A) Gave the FDA authority to determine scheduling of controlled substances and
removed scheduling responsibility from the FDA
B) Established the DEA and gave it authority over all drugs
C) Created the Board of Pharmacy
D) Required all pharmacies to register with the state
Answer: A) Gave the FDA authority to determine the scheduling of cont rolled
substances and removed scheduling responsibility from the FDA
Rationale: The Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970
gave the FDA authority to determine the scheduling of controlled substances, but
later removed this responsibility and gave the DEA functions including
interpretation, implementation, enforcement, and regulation development.
5. What year was the Virus-Toxin Law (Biologics Control Act) enacted, and what
was its effect?
A) 1902 - required licensing of biologics establishments, inspections of vaccine
manufacturers, and premarket approval of vaccines
B) 1906 - prohibited the marketing of adulterated and misbranded food and drugs
C) 1970 - established the DEA
,D) 1984 - required child-resistant packaging for all prescription drugs
Answer: A) 1902 - required licensing of biologics establishments, inspections of
vaccine manufacturers, and premarket approval of vaccines
Rationale: The Virus-Toxin Law, also known as the Biologics Control Act, was
enacted in 1902. It required licensing of biologics establishments, inspections of
vaccine manufacturers, and premarket approval of vaccines and other biological
products.
6. What does it mean when controlled substances are described as a "closed system
of distribution"?
A) Only the substances themselves are scheduled, and all persons with lawful
access are registered
B) Controlled substances cannot be prescribed by mid-level practitioners
C) All controlled substances must be stored in a locked safe
D) Patients cannot access controlled substances without a special permit
Answer: A) Only the substances themselves are scheduled, and all persons with
lawful access are registered
Rationale: A closed system of distribution means that access to controlled
substances is restricted through both registration and scheduling. Only the
substances are scheduled, and all persons with lawful access must be registered.
7. What defines a substance as a "scheduled drug"?
A) It is available over-the-counter
B) It has the potential for abuse or can cause addiction
C) It is a generic medication
D) It is approved by the FDA for OTC use
Answer: B) It has the potential for abuse or can cause addiction
Rationale: Scheduled drugs are substances that have the potential for abuse or can
cause addiction. They are categorized into one of five schedules based on their
abuse potential and accepted medical use.
8. Who is permitted to be an "authorized collector" for controlled substance take-
back programs?
A) Physicians and other practitioners
B) Hospitals without a pharmacy and clinics without a pharmacy
C) Manufacturers, distributors, reverse distributors, narcotic treatment programs,
hospitals/clinics with on-site pharmacy, and retail pharmacies
D) All healthcare facilities regardless of pharmacy status
Answer: C) Manufacturers, distributors, reverse distributors, narcotic treatment
programs, hospitals/clinics with on-site pharmacy, and retail pharmacies
, Rationale: Only manufacturers, distributors, reverse distributors, narcotic treatment
programs, hospitals/clinics with an on-site pharmacy, and retail pharmacies are
permitted to be authorized collectors. Physicians, practitioners, and facilities
without a pharmacy cannot be authorized collectors.
9. What are the two ways for an authorized collector to take back controlled
substances?
A) In-person drop-off and mail-in programs only
B) Maintaining collection receptacles and administering mail-back programs
C) Law enforcement coordination only
D) On-site destruction and incineration
Answer: B) Maintaining collection receptacles and administering mail-back
programs
Rationale: Authorized collectors can take back controlled substances through two
methods: maintaining collection receptacles and administering mail-back
programs. Hospitals/clinics and retail pharmacies may also maintain collection
receptacles at long-term care facilities.
10. What does "non-retrievable" mean in the context of controlled substance
disposal?
A) The substance has been returned to the manufacturer
B) A process that permanently alters the controlled substance's physical or
chemical state through irreversible means, rendering it unavailable and unusable
C) The substance has been confiscated by law enforcement
D) The prescription has expired
Answer: B) A process that permanently alters the controlled substance's physical or
chemical state through irreversible means, rendering it unavailable and unusable
Rationale: Non-retrievable refers to a process that permanently alters the controlled
substance's physical or chemical condition through irreversible means, rendering
the substance unavailable and unusable for all practical purposes.
11. When law enforcement agencies collect controlled substances, what is
required?
A) They must have a DEA registration
B) They are permitted to take back controlled substances and no DEA registration
is required
C) They must obtain a warrant
D) They must be accompanied by a pharmacist
Answer: B) They are permitted to take back controlled substances and no DEA
registration is required