Pharmacy Board
Jurisprudence Exam
(MPJE): Comprehensive
SBE Question Bank with
Verified Answers for
Licensure Mastery
PART 0: THE NAVIGATOR
● Tier 1 (Questions 1–28) - Foundational Syntax & Application: Testing "Hard Deck"
definitions, continuing education (CE) mandates, record retention statutes, PDMP
reporting timelines, and primary operational theories under D.C. Municipal Regulations
(DCMR) Title 22-B and Title 17.
● Tier 2 (Questions 29–58) - Complex Application & Simulation: Integrating variable
changes in direct supervision, emergency dispensing of controlled and non-controlled
substances, compounding constraints, and Pharmacist-in-Charge (PIC) transitions.
● Tier 3 (Questions 59–88) - Grandmaster Synthesis: High-stakes, multi-variable
scenarios demanding synthesis of post-HORA 2024 vaccine scope, protected class
substitution (antipsychotics/chemotherapy), PMP mandatory triggers, and collaborative
practice liabilities.
PART I: THE PRIMER
Mastering this exhaustive test bank translates directly to elite licensure mastery and
unimpeachable clinical authority within the District of Columbia's stringent regulatory framework.
This document forges rote memorization into real-world administrative intuition, protecting both
the patient and your professional license.
,The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
● Record Retention: All dispensing records MUST be maintained for exactly 5 years.
Records older than 2 years may be stored offsite but must be retrievable within 3
business days.
● PDMP Mandates: Dispensers MUST report covered substances within 24 hours.
Mandatory queries apply to opioids/benzodiazepines >7-day supply. Gabapentin,
cyclobenzaprine, and butalbital are highly regulated "drugs of concern".
● Prescription Expiration: Schedule II scripts expire in 30 days. Schedule III-V expire in 6
months (max 5 refills). Non-controlled scripts expire in 1 year.
● CE Protocol (Biennial): Pharmacists require 40 hours (10 live, 2 medication errors, 2
LGBTQ cultural competency). Technicians require 20 hours (2 law, 2 safety, 2 LGBTQ).
● Protected Substitutions: Antipsychotics, antidepressants, chemotherapy, antiretrovirals,
and immunosuppressives CANNOT be therapeutically substituted on a refill without prior
prescriber approval.
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1: Foundational Syntax & Application
Q1: Under D.C. pharmacy law, how long MUST a pharmacy maintain records of all prescription
drugs dispensed? A) 2 years B) 3 years C) 5 years D) 7 years
● The Answer: C (5 years)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Two years is the federal DEA minimum, but D.C. law is stricter.
○ B is incorrect: Three days is the retrieval time for offsite records, not the retention
period.
○ D is incorrect: Seven years exceeds the statutory requirement.
The Mentor's Analysis: State law supersedes federal law when stricter. D.C. mandates a 5-year
retention for all dispensing records. Professional/Academic Intuition: Always default to the
5-year rule for D.C. dispensing records.
Q2: A pharmacist stores 3-year-old prescription records offsite. Within what timeframe MUST
these records be retrievable upon Board request? A) 24 hours B) 48 hours C) 3 business days
D) 5 business days
● The Answer: C (3 business days)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: 24 hours applies to PDMP reporting.
○ B is incorrect: 48 hours is the reporting window for theft/loss. * D is incorrect: Five
days is too lenient under 22-B DCMR.
The Mentor's Analysis: While offsite storage reduces clutter, the Board demands timely access
during audits. Professional/Academic Intuition: Offsite records must surface within 3
business days.
Q3: Which of the following drugs is classified as a "drug of concern" requiring mandatory
reporting to the D.C. PDMP despite NOT being a federal controlled substance? A)
Promethazine with codeine B) Gabapentin C) Pseudoephedrine D) Naloxone
● The Answer: B (Gabapentin)
● Distractor Analysis:
, ○ A is incorrect: This is a Schedule V controlled substance, not a drug of concern.
○ C is incorrect: Tracked via NPLEx, not the PDMP.
○ D is incorrect: Naloxone is an antagonist, not a drug of concern.
The Mentor's Analysis: D.C. specifically targets Gabapentin, butalbital, and cyclobenzaprine to
combat off-label abuse. Professional/Academic Intuition: Gabapentin triggers D.C. PDMP
reporting.
Q4: A pharmacist renewing their D.C. license MUST complete 40 hours of Continuing Education
(CE). How many of these hours MUST be dedicated to LGBTQ cultural competency? A) 1 hour
B) 2 hours C) 5 hours D) 10 hours
● The Answer: B (2 hours)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: D.C. specifies exactly two hours.
○ C is incorrect: This exceeds the mandate.
○ D is incorrect: Ten hours is the live CE requirement.
The Mentor's Analysis: D.C. explicitly requires targeted CE to address healthcare disparities.
Professional/Academic Intuition: 2 hours of LGBTQ competency is a strict renewal
requirement.
Q5: A pharmacy technician is renewing their D.C. registration. What is their total biennial CE
requirement? A) 10 hours B) 15 hours C) 20 hours D) 40 hours
● The Answer: C (20 hours)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: 10 hours is the live requirement for pharmacists.
○ B is incorrect: Falls short of the statutory minimum.
○ D is incorrect: This is the pharmacist requirement.
The Mentor's Analysis: Technicians must maintain baseline competency, requiring 20 hours with
dedicated law and safety components. Professional/Academic Intuition: Technicians require
exactly half the CE of pharmacists.
Q6: In D.C., what is the maximum legal expiration date for a Schedule II prescription from the
date it is written? A) 7 days B) 14 days C) 30 days D) 6 months
● The Answer: C (30 days)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: 7 days is the deadline for emergency cover scripts.
○ B is incorrect: A common novice assumption.
○ D is incorrect: 6 months applies to C-III through C-V.
The Mentor's Analysis: D.C. imposes a strict 30-day lifespan on C-II prescriptions to prevent
delayed dispensing of high-risk narcotics. Professional/Academic Intuition: C-II scripts die at 30
days.
Q7: What is the maximum number of refills permitted on a Schedule III prescription? A) Zero B)
3 C) 5 D) 6
● The Answer: C (5)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Zero applies strictly to Schedule II. * B is incorrect: A legacy trap not
aligned with the CSA. * D is incorrect: The prescription expires at 6 months, but
max refills are 5.
The Mentor's Analysis: Federal and D.C. law align on the 6-month/5-refill ceiling for intermediate
schedules. Professional/Academic Intuition: C-III and C-IV max out at 5 refills or 6 months,
whichever is FIRST.
Q8: A pharmacist receives a prescription for an antipsychotic drug. The patient requests a