EXAM PREP
7TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)MARGARET FITZGERALD
TEST BANK
MCQ 1
Reference
Ch. 1 — Exam Structure & Clinical Reasoning Strategy
Question
An NP candidate encounters a board question describing a
patient with multiple abnormal findings, several of which
appear urgent. The stem does not explicitly ask for a diagnosis
but instead asks what the NP should do next. Based on
Fitzgerald’s guidance, what strategy should the candidate
prioritize first?
A. Identify the most complex diagnosis present
B. Determine whether the patient is sick or not sick
,C. Select the option requiring the least intervention
D. Focus on ruling out rare but life-threatening conditions
Correct Answer
B
Rationale — Correct
Fitzgerald emphasizes that board questions are fundamentally
grounded in “sick vs. not sick” determination before diagnosis
or management selection. This initial stratification guides
urgency, diagnostic efficiency, and next steps. Recognizing
acuity allows the NP to safely prioritize care, which is a core
board expectation.
Rationale — Incorrect
A. Complexity does not equate to urgency and may misdirect
prioritization.
C. Least intervention is not appropriate if the patient is clinically
unstable.
D. Rare conditions are considered only after acuity and
likelihood are assessed.
Teaching Point
Always determine acuity before diagnosis or management.
Citation
Fitzgerald, M. (2025). Nurse Practitioner Certification Exam Prep
(7th ed.). Ch. 1.
MCQ 2
,Reference
Ch. 1 — Test-Taking Errors & Cognitive Traps
Question
During practice exams, an NP student frequently selects
answers that are factually correct but not appropriate for the
clinical scenario presented. According to Fitzgerald, which
cognitive error is most likely occurring?
A. Overreliance on memorization
B. Failure to recognize distractors
C. Inability to recall clinical guidelines
D. Misinterpretation of pharmacologic dosing
Correct Answer
B
Rationale — Correct
Fitzgerald notes that board exams deliberately include plausible
distractors that are clinically true but contextually incorrect.
Failure to identify these distractors reflects difficulty with
scenario-based reasoning rather than content deficits. The
exam rewards contextual judgment, not isolated facts.
Rationale — Incorrect
A. Memorization alone is insufficient but not the primary issue
described.
C. Guidelines may not be explicitly tested in this manner.
D. Dosing errors are not implied in the scenario.
, Teaching Point
Correct facts can still be wrong answers.
Citation
Fitzgerald, M. (2025). Nurse Practitioner Certification Exam Prep
(7th ed.). Ch. 1.
MCQ 3
Reference
Ch. 1 — Question Dissection & Stem Analysis
Question
An NP candidate notices that the final sentence of a board
question asks, “Which finding is most concerning?” rather than
“What is the diagnosis?” What adjustment should the
candidate make in their approach?
A. Focus on epidemiology
B. Identify the red-flag feature
C. Select the rarest condition
D. Choose the most comprehensive answer
Correct Answer
B
Rationale — Correct
Fitzgerald stresses reading the last line first to clarify task intent.
When a question asks what is “most concerning,” the candidate
must identify red flags that signal instability or need for urgent