EXAM 2026/2027 | Questions with Verified Answers |
Chamberlain University | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
DOMAIN 1: Interviewing Techniques and Health History (12 Questions)
Q1: A 34-year-old transgender female patient presents to the clinic for a wellness
examination. During the health history interview, the nurse practitioner wants to
establish rapport while demonstrating cultural sensitivity. Which interviewing technique
best demonstrates patient-centered care and gender-affirming practice?
A. Ask only about medical history to avoid making the patient uncomfortable with
personal questions
B. State, "I see from your chart you were born male. Do you still have male anatomy?"
[CORRECT]
C. Ask, "What name and pronouns would you like me to use during our visit today?"
[CORRECT]
D. Assume the patient's gender identity based on appearance and proceed with the
interview
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Patient-centered, culturally sensitive care requires explicit respect for patient
identity and autonomy. Option C demonstrates best practice by asking the patient to
self-identify their preferred name and pronouns, which establishes trust and affirms
,their identity. This approach aligns with Chamberlain's emphasis on cultural
competence and the FIFE model's focus on patient perspective.
Option A is incorrect because avoiding relevant health history questions (including
sexual health, hormone therapy, or surgical history) could compromise care quality and
safety. Option B, while attempting to gather clinical information, uses stigmatizing
language ("born male") and invasive questioning that damages rapport. The appropriate
approach is to ask about "sex assigned at birth" only when clinically relevant, using
respectful language. Option D violates fundamental principles of patient-centered care
by making assumptions that can lead to misgendering and therapeutic relationship
breakdown.
CLINICAL PEARL: Always use open-ended, respectful questions about identity: "How
would you like to be addressed?" and "Tell me about your gender journey" are more
therapeutic than binary or assumptive questions. Document preferred name and
pronouns prominently in the chart.
Q2: During a focused history for a 67-year-old male with chest pain, the nurse
practitioner uses the OLDCARTS mnemonic to characterize the symptom. The patient
states the pain began "three days ago while I was shoveling snow, lasts about 15
minutes, feels like pressure squeezing my chest, and gets worse with exertion but better
when I rest." Which component of OLDCARTS is missing from this description?
A. Location and Radiation
B. Associated Symptoms
C. Severity/Quantity
D. Timing (frequency) [CORRECT]
,Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The patient provided Onset (three days ago), Location (chest), Duration (15
minutes), Characteristics (pressure, squeezing), Aggravating/Alleviating factors (worse
with exertion, better with rest), Related symptoms (implied none mentioned), and
Timing (frequency - "when shoveling snow" suggests intermittent). However, the patient
did not quantify Severity using a pain scale (0-10) or functional impact, which is
essential for triage, treatment decisions, and monitoring response to therapy.
Option A is incorrect because location was stated (chest), though radiation was not
mentioned—however, the question asks what is missing from the provided description,
and location was included. Option B is incorrect because associated symptoms were
addressed by omission (patient didn't mention dyspnea, diaphoresis, nausea). Option D
is incorrect because timing/frequency was described (intermittent with exertion). The
Severity component requires a quantitative measure (pain scale) or qualitative
functional assessment ("pain so severe it stops activity").
ASSESSMENT TIP: Always ask: "On a scale of 0-10, with 0 being no pain and 10 being
the worst pain imaginable, how would you rate this pain?" For patients with cognitive or
language barriers, use visual analog scales or functional descriptors.
Q3: A nurse practitioner is conducting a comprehensive health history with a 28-year-old
female who presents with fatigue. Which finding during the interview process best
demonstrates the technique of "validation"?
A. "I understand you're feeling tired. Many women your age experience fatigue due to
work-life balance issues."
B. "You mentioned feeling exhausted despite sleeping 8 hours. That must be frustrating
and concerning for you." [CORRECT]
, C. "Fatigue can be a sign of serious illness like cancer or autoimmune disease. We need
to run extensive tests."
D. "Have you tried going to bed earlier or taking vitamins? Lifestyle changes often help
with tiredness."
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Validation is a therapeutic communication technique that acknowledges and
legitimizes the patient's feelings and experiences without judgment, minimization, or
premature reassurance. Option B validates the patient's experience by reflecting back
the stated concern (exhaustion despite adequate sleep) and acknowledging the
emotional impact (frustrating, concerning), which builds trust and encourages further
disclosure.
Option A minimizes the patient's concern by attributing it to a stereotypical cause
without assessment, potentially missing serious pathology. Option C introduces anxiety
through catastrophic thinking and premature testing without completing the history and
physical examination. Option D offers premature advice and solutions before fully
understanding the problem, which can shut down further history-taking and miss critical
diagnostic clues.
CLINICAL PEARL: Validation differs from agreement. You validate the patient's
emotional experience ("This is difficult for you") without necessarily agreeing with their
interpretation ("This must be cancer"). Use phrases like: "That sounds challenging" or
"Help me understand how this affects your daily life."
Q4: During an interview in the emergency department, a 45-year-old male becomes
visibly agitated when asked about alcohol use, stating, "That's none of your business!