OREGON MPJE PRACTICE TEST QUESTIONS AND 100%
CORRECT ANSWERS 2025-2026!!
A provider with MD credentials electronically transmits three prescriptions for Tamiflu
to your pharmacy. The prescriptions are for both family members and the Cuddles, the
family cat. You:
A. Fill the prescriptions for the 2 humans only
B. After verifying that the prescriber has a patient-provider relationship with both
humans and the cat, fill all the prescriptions
C. Fill all prescriptions as written
D. After checking with a local veterinarian that it is ok for a cat to take Tamiflu, fill all
prescriptions as written - ANSWER>>Answer A
A Medical Doctor may not write prescriptions for animals. So no matter if the
prescription is correctly written for a cat, or even if the provider knows the cat you may
not fill the prescription for the cat
Which of the following is true in regards to medications dispensed from a DPDO?
A. A 60g tube of Eucrisa must be labeled but does not need to have cautionary
statements on the label
B. Medications can be kept in the physician's desk drawer provided the drawer remains
locked
C. A 60g tube of Eucrisa must be labeled but does not need to contain a physical
description
D. A note in the patient's electronic chart that Eucrisa was dispensed, kept with the
treatment notes is sufficient to meet the record keeping requirements for dispensing
prescriptions - ANSWER>>Answer C
Although the review did not cover DPDO, it did provide some general guidance. No
matter what outlet, medications must be stored and secured appropriately, they must
be labeled, counseling is required, and everything must be documented. You may not,
,without reading through the rule on DPDO's be able to answer this question confidently
(which is why you should read the rules!), you should be able to reason it out
B is incorrect because it is not likely that the physician's desk drawer would meet
appropriate criteria for the storage or security of medications.
C This is correct because we know that medications are required to be correctly labeled
and any unit-of-use medications would not require a PIL, or physician's description of
the product
A is incorrect because cautionary statements must always appear on a label.
D is incorrect because the dispensing record must be an unique and separate record
from the patient medical record.
You may reason this out if you think of how the BOP would inspect this outlet
Which activities must be completed only by a pharmacist?
I. DUR check
II. Final verification
III. Administer immunizations
A. III only
B. II & III only
C. II only
D. I only - ANSWER>>Answer C: II only
Only a pharmacist may perform the final check of the prescription. Properly trained
pharmacy intern may also complete DUR checks and administration of immunization
A provider writes a prescription for Kadian, "Take 1 tablet by mouth every 6 hours as
needed, #120. Please dispense 1 week supply at a time." A diagnosis of Stage 4 breast
CA is written on the prescription. You have verified with the provider previously that this
is terminal diagnosis. You:
A. Call the providers office and explain that you must provide the entire quantiy at one
,time
B. Dispense the entire amount to the patient's agent and advise them they must only
provide the patient a one-week supply at any one time
C. Dispense #28, note on the prescription the number dispensed and the number
remaining and advise the patient's agent they must request the remaining amount within
30 days
D. Dispense #28 document on the prescription the number dispensed and number
remaining - ANSWER>>Answer D
A patient with a terminal dx may get partial fills of a CII Rx up to 60 days after the Rx was
written.
Your pharmacy stores applicable records offsite to optimize space in the pharmacy. The
BOP comes in for an inspection and asks for the records you store on-site. You show
him:
A. Onsite records of the last 365 days and inform him that the remaining 2 years of the
records can be made available in 3 business days, or B. Onsite records of the last 120
days and inform him that the remaining 2.5 years of the records can be made available
in 3 business days
C. The records of the last 365 days that are stored onsite and inform him that the
remaining 2 years of the records will be made available in 5 business days
D. Onsite records for the last 120 days and inform him that the remaining 2.5 years of
records will be available in 5business days - ANSWER>>Answer A
Records can be moved to an off-site location after 1 year and must be retrieved within 3
days.
A drug utilization review DUR for a prescription may completely consist of which of the
following:
I. A review of the contraindications between the medication and the patients disease
states
II. A review of the contraindications between the medications and the patient's other
medications listed in the pharmacy profile
III. Review for drug abuse
, A. II only
B. III only
C. I & II only
D. I, II & III - ANSWER>>Answer D
A complete DUR for a prescription may include a review of patients' allergies,
comorbidities, other medications, as listed at your pharmacy, the appropriateness of
the prescription itself, medication abuse, and using too much or too little of a mediation.
Therefore all of the options are appropriate component of DUR
1. Which of the following emergency medication refills may you provide?
A. 96 hr emergency supply of Vimpat
B. 48 hr emergency supply of Viibryd
C. 30-day emergency supply of metazolone
D. 48 hr emergency supply of Vimpat - ANSWER>>Answer B
A 48-hour supply of Viibryd is the only one of the choices that is considered essential
therapy and less than 72 hours supply and is not a controlled substance. Although
Vimpat is considered essential therapy, since it is a controlled substance you cannot
provide emergency supply to a patient
OAR 855.041.1120
1. Which of the following medications can not be taken back from a patient for disposal?
A. A patient brings his filled bottle of Xanax back to the pharmacy because today's fill
date was given on a prescription by an urgent care provider against his pain contract
that he had forgotten until now.
B. The patient medication, irbesartan was involved in the recent recall of it and will
come into the pharmacy with this current medication with which to replace.
C. A patient discovers that the expiration date on the box of Imitrex. She received from
the pharmacy today expired last month, and brings it back in
D. A patient brings his bottle of Xanax, dispensed today, back to the pharmacy because
CORRECT ANSWERS 2025-2026!!
A provider with MD credentials electronically transmits three prescriptions for Tamiflu
to your pharmacy. The prescriptions are for both family members and the Cuddles, the
family cat. You:
A. Fill the prescriptions for the 2 humans only
B. After verifying that the prescriber has a patient-provider relationship with both
humans and the cat, fill all the prescriptions
C. Fill all prescriptions as written
D. After checking with a local veterinarian that it is ok for a cat to take Tamiflu, fill all
prescriptions as written - ANSWER>>Answer A
A Medical Doctor may not write prescriptions for animals. So no matter if the
prescription is correctly written for a cat, or even if the provider knows the cat you may
not fill the prescription for the cat
Which of the following is true in regards to medications dispensed from a DPDO?
A. A 60g tube of Eucrisa must be labeled but does not need to have cautionary
statements on the label
B. Medications can be kept in the physician's desk drawer provided the drawer remains
locked
C. A 60g tube of Eucrisa must be labeled but does not need to contain a physical
description
D. A note in the patient's electronic chart that Eucrisa was dispensed, kept with the
treatment notes is sufficient to meet the record keeping requirements for dispensing
prescriptions - ANSWER>>Answer C
Although the review did not cover DPDO, it did provide some general guidance. No
matter what outlet, medications must be stored and secured appropriately, they must
be labeled, counseling is required, and everything must be documented. You may not,
,without reading through the rule on DPDO's be able to answer this question confidently
(which is why you should read the rules!), you should be able to reason it out
B is incorrect because it is not likely that the physician's desk drawer would meet
appropriate criteria for the storage or security of medications.
C This is correct because we know that medications are required to be correctly labeled
and any unit-of-use medications would not require a PIL, or physician's description of
the product
A is incorrect because cautionary statements must always appear on a label.
D is incorrect because the dispensing record must be an unique and separate record
from the patient medical record.
You may reason this out if you think of how the BOP would inspect this outlet
Which activities must be completed only by a pharmacist?
I. DUR check
II. Final verification
III. Administer immunizations
A. III only
B. II & III only
C. II only
D. I only - ANSWER>>Answer C: II only
Only a pharmacist may perform the final check of the prescription. Properly trained
pharmacy intern may also complete DUR checks and administration of immunization
A provider writes a prescription for Kadian, "Take 1 tablet by mouth every 6 hours as
needed, #120. Please dispense 1 week supply at a time." A diagnosis of Stage 4 breast
CA is written on the prescription. You have verified with the provider previously that this
is terminal diagnosis. You:
A. Call the providers office and explain that you must provide the entire quantiy at one
,time
B. Dispense the entire amount to the patient's agent and advise them they must only
provide the patient a one-week supply at any one time
C. Dispense #28, note on the prescription the number dispensed and the number
remaining and advise the patient's agent they must request the remaining amount within
30 days
D. Dispense #28 document on the prescription the number dispensed and number
remaining - ANSWER>>Answer D
A patient with a terminal dx may get partial fills of a CII Rx up to 60 days after the Rx was
written.
Your pharmacy stores applicable records offsite to optimize space in the pharmacy. The
BOP comes in for an inspection and asks for the records you store on-site. You show
him:
A. Onsite records of the last 365 days and inform him that the remaining 2 years of the
records can be made available in 3 business days, or B. Onsite records of the last 120
days and inform him that the remaining 2.5 years of the records can be made available
in 3 business days
C. The records of the last 365 days that are stored onsite and inform him that the
remaining 2 years of the records will be made available in 5 business days
D. Onsite records for the last 120 days and inform him that the remaining 2.5 years of
records will be available in 5business days - ANSWER>>Answer A
Records can be moved to an off-site location after 1 year and must be retrieved within 3
days.
A drug utilization review DUR for a prescription may completely consist of which of the
following:
I. A review of the contraindications between the medication and the patients disease
states
II. A review of the contraindications between the medications and the patient's other
medications listed in the pharmacy profile
III. Review for drug abuse
, A. II only
B. III only
C. I & II only
D. I, II & III - ANSWER>>Answer D
A complete DUR for a prescription may include a review of patients' allergies,
comorbidities, other medications, as listed at your pharmacy, the appropriateness of
the prescription itself, medication abuse, and using too much or too little of a mediation.
Therefore all of the options are appropriate component of DUR
1. Which of the following emergency medication refills may you provide?
A. 96 hr emergency supply of Vimpat
B. 48 hr emergency supply of Viibryd
C. 30-day emergency supply of metazolone
D. 48 hr emergency supply of Vimpat - ANSWER>>Answer B
A 48-hour supply of Viibryd is the only one of the choices that is considered essential
therapy and less than 72 hours supply and is not a controlled substance. Although
Vimpat is considered essential therapy, since it is a controlled substance you cannot
provide emergency supply to a patient
OAR 855.041.1120
1. Which of the following medications can not be taken back from a patient for disposal?
A. A patient brings his filled bottle of Xanax back to the pharmacy because today's fill
date was given on a prescription by an urgent care provider against his pain contract
that he had forgotten until now.
B. The patient medication, irbesartan was involved in the recent recall of it and will
come into the pharmacy with this current medication with which to replace.
C. A patient discovers that the expiration date on the box of Imitrex. She received from
the pharmacy today expired last month, and brings it back in
D. A patient brings his bottle of Xanax, dispensed today, back to the pharmacy because