PRACTITIONER PRESCRIBERS FINAL EXAM
PAPER 2026 COMPLETE ANSWERS VERIFIED
◉ What is the goal of a patient-centered approach in APRN
prescribing? Answer: The goal is to achieve the best therapy that is
least invasive, least expensive, and least likely to cause adverse
reactions.
◉ What is the significance of evaluating drug information sources?
Answer: Evaluating sources for bias, currency, relevance, and
research validity ensures that APRNs make informed prescribing
decisions.
◉ How do APRNs integrate alternative therapies into their
prescribing practices? Answer: APRNs review alternative therapies,
including lifestyle changes and non-pharmacological approaches,
alongside pharmacological options.
◉ What are the two types of nonadherence to medication? Answer:
Intentional (e.g., perceived ineffectiveness, adverse reactions, cost)
and unintentional (e.g., forgetfulness, lack of knowledge, cognitive
impairment).
,◉ What are some barriers to medication adherence? Answer:
Barriers include asymptomatic or chronic conditions, cognitive
impairment, psychiatric illness, complex regimens, and financial
strain.
◉ What strategies can improve medication adherence? Answer:
Strategies include patient education, regimen simplification, support
mechanisms, addressing barriers, and strategic scheduling.
◉ What is the role of patient education in improving adherence?
Answer: It involves high-quality communication, the 'teach-back'
method, simple language, family involvement, addressing knowledge
deficits, motivational interviewing, and technology use.
◉ How can regimen simplification enhance adherence? Answer: By
using fixed-dose combinations and once-daily dosing.
◉ What are some support mechanisms to improve adherence?
Answer: Early phone contacts, smartphone apps, text messaging,
and personalized drug schedules integrated with daily routines.
◉ What are some ways to address barriers to adherence? Answer:
Anticipating sensory/mobility challenges, leveraging longer-acting
drugs, using reinforcements, involving caregivers, and identifying
financial assistance programs.
,◉ What does strategic scheduling involve in the context of
medication adherence? Answer: Aligning follow-up visits with drug
regimens or lab work and promoting 'one-stop shopping' for care
and refills.
◉ What methods can be used to measure medication adherence?
Answer: Patient reports, clinical outcomes, pill counts, refill records,
and validated scales like the Medication Adherence Questionnaire
(MAQ).
◉ What factors are predictors of medication adherence? Answer:
General health, medical history, life goals, medication history,
comorbidities, social stability, employment status, health beliefs,
cultural background, family/social support, and educational
background.
◉ What is pharmacology? Answer: The study of drugs and their
actions, where a drug is any chemical substance producing a
measurable biological response.
◉ What defines ideal drug properties? Answer: Convenient
administration, single desired action, no unwanted effects,
convenient duration, and improved quality of life.
, ◉ What are the stages of drug development? Answer: Preclinical
stage, clinical stage (Phase I, II, III), and postmarketing surveillance.
◉ What occurs during the preclinical stage of drug development?
Answer: Identification of promising drug targets and extensive
testing in cells, isolated tissues, and animals to establish safety.
◉ What is the focus of Phase I clinical trials? Answer: Establishing
biological effects, safe dosages, and pharmacokinetics in a small
number of healthy patients.
◉ What is the goal of Phase II clinical trials? Answer: To treat
disease in a small number of patients to establish potential for
improving outcomes.
◉ What is the purpose of Phase III clinical trials? Answer: To
compare the new drug to standard therapy in a larger patient
population, aiming for equivalence or superiority.
◉ What is postmarketing surveillance? Answer: Continuous
monitoring after FDA approval where health professionals report
adverse events.