ACVPM – PUBLIC HEALTH
ADMINISTRATION/EDUCATION EXAM 2026
BANK ALL COMPLETE (171) CURRENT
TESTING QUESTIONS AND DETAILED
CORRECT ANSWERS|GUARANTEED PASS.
ACVPM
Prepare for the ACVPM – Public Health Administration/Education
Exam with this concise study resource covering public health
management, education strategies, and exam-style questions. It
reinforces key concepts aligned with certification standards
from the American College of Veterinary Preventive Medicine.
Designed to support effective preparation and test readiness.
Suitable for veterinary professionals preparing for ACVPM
certification exams.
Section 362 of the Public Health Service Act: Suspension of
Entries and Imports from Designated Places to Prevent
Spread of Communicable Diseases
42 U.S.C. § 265 ✓ ✓ ...... ANSWER ....... This section of
the Public Health Service Act authorizes the Secretary of
HHS, if he or she determines that a communicable disease
exists in a foreign country and that introduction of property
from this foreign country poses a serious danger of
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introducing the disease into the United States, to suspend in
the interests of public health the "introduction of property"
from those foreign countries or places for the time
necessary to avert the danger, in accordance with approved
regulations.
Pets Evacuation and Transportation Standards (PETS) Act of
2006
Pub. L. No. 109-308; 42 U.S.C. §§ 5170(b), 5196, 5196(b) ✓
✓ ...... ANSWER ....... The PETS Act amends the Stafford
Act to require the FEMA Director to ensure that state and
local emergency preparedness plans "take into account the
needs of individuals with household pets and service
animals prior to, during, and following a major disaster or
emergency."
Federal Tort Claims Act
28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671-2680 ✓ ✓ ...... ANSWER .......
The Act waives the doctrine of sovereign immunity so that
the United States can be held liable for the negligent acts or
omissions of federal employees committed within the scope
of their federal employment. Claims based on discretionary
functions or intentional torts are explicitly precluded.
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Further, suits by military personnel for injuries sustained
during service (also known as the Feres doctrine) have been
deemed by the courts as outside of the Act. To proceed
against the United States, the Attorney General must certify
that the federal employee was acting within the scope of his
office or employment, or, if the Attorney General refuses, the
employee may petition the court to make this finding and
certify. Once certified, the United States replaces the
employee as the party defendant in the suit.
Federal Employee Compensation Act of 1993
Pub. L. No. 103-3; 5 U.S.C. § 81 ✓ ✓ ...... ANSWER .......
The Federal Employee Compensation Act provides workers'
compensation to civilian federal employees injured or killed
while performing their duties. An injured employee or the
family of an employee killed while performing his duties is
entitled to related medical services and benefits unless the
employee intended to bring about the injury or death,
caused the injury or death through the employee's own
willful misconduct, or the injury or death was proximately
caused by the employee's intoxication.
Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness (PREP) Act
of 2005
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Pub. L. No. 109-148; 42 U.S.C. §§ 247d-6d, 247d-6e ✓ ✓
...... ANSWER ....... Authorizes the Secretary of HHS to
issue a declaration that provides immunity from tort liability
for claims of loss (except willful misconduct) caused by,
arising out of, relating to, or resulting from administration or
use of countermeasures to diseases, threats, and conditions
determined by the Secretary to constitute a present, or
credible risk of a future public health emergency. The
immunity applies to entities and individuals involved in the
development, manufacture, testing, distribution,
administration, and use of such countermeasures. As
amended by PAHPRA (see above), PREP Act immunity also
explicitly applies to products or technology intended to
enhance medical countermeasures, in addition to the
countermeasures themselves. PAHPRA also extends
immunity to countermeasures authorized under sections
564A and 564B of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(see above). The Secretary's declaration includes, among
other things, the countermeasures covered by the
declaration; the category of diseases, health conditions, or
health threats for which administration and use of the
countermeasures recommended; the effective time period
of the declaration; the population of individuals receiving the
countermeasure; limitations, if any, on the geographic area
for which immunity is in effect; limitations, if any, on the