EXAM ACTUAL Exam ALL 250 QUESTIONS AND CORRECT
ANSWERS LATEST UPDATE THIS YEAR
SUMMARIZED EXAM COVERAGE
The 250-question WGU D450 Community Health and Population-Focused Nursing practice
exam covers 20 major content areas: Epidemiology & Disease Surveillance (25 questions),
Levels of Prevention (10), Community Assessment (10), Vulnerable Populations (15), Disaster
Management (10), Environmental Health (10), Program Planning & Evaluation (10), Cultural
Competence & Health Equity (10), Ethics & Advocacy (10), Collaboration & Leadership (15),
Communicable Disease Control (20), Maternal & Child Health (15), Mental Health in the
Community (15), Chronic Disease Management (15), School Health (15), Occupational Health
(15), Rural & Global Health (15), Health Policy & Advocacy (15), Emergency Preparedness &
Response (10), and Legal & Ethical Issues (5). Each question includes a correct answer and
rationale, with the exam weighted most heavily on epidemiology, communicable disease, and
vulnerable populations.
Section 1: Epidemiology & Disease Surveillance (Questions 1–10)
1. A community has 200 existing cases of diabetes on January 1. During the year, 50 new cases
are diagnosed. The population is 10,000. What is the prevalence of diabetes on December 31?
• A) 50 per 10,000
• B) 200 per 10,000
• C) 250 per 10,000
• D) 500 per 10,000
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Prevalence measures all existing cases (both old and new) at a specific point in time.
Formula: (Existing cases + New cases) / Total population = (200 + 50) / 10,000 = 250 per 10,000
or 2.5%. Incidence only counts new cases (50 per 10,000), which is not what prevalence
measures.
2. During a foodborne outbreak at a church picnic, 60 of 120 attendees became ill within 6 hours.
What is the attack rate?
, • A) 20%
• B) 50%
• C) 60%
• D) 100%
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Attack rate is a special type of incidence rate used in outbreaks. Formula: (Number of
people who became ill) / (Total number of people exposed) = 60/120 = 0.5 or 50%. This helps
identify how many exposed individuals actually developed the illness.
3. Which measure is most appropriate for comparing disease frequency between two
communities of different population sizes?
• A) Raw case counts
• B) Rates (e.g., per 1,000 or 100,000)
• C) Prevalence proportion
• D) Relative risk
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Raw case counts are misleading when populations differ. Rates standardize for
population size, allowing fair comparison. For example, 100 cases in a town of 1,000 (10%) is
very different from 100 cases in a city of 100,000 (0.1%).
4. A nurse investigates a cluster of lung cancer cases in one neighborhood. This is an example of:
• A) Descriptive epidemiology
• B) Field epidemiology / outbreak investigation
• C) Analytic epidemiology
• D) Surveillance epidemiology
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Field epidemiology investigates unexpected health problems in a specific geographic
area or population. Unlike routine surveillance, it responds to urgent, real-time clusters.
Descriptive epidemiology describes patterns but doesn't necessarily imply active investigation.
,5. The incubation period is best defined as:
• A) Time from symptom onset to recovery
• B) Time from exposure to symptom onset
• C) Time from diagnosis to treatment
• D) Time from exposure to infectiousness
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The incubation period is critical in outbreak investigations because it helps identify
the probable time of exposure. For example, if symptoms appear 6–48 hours after a meal, the
contaminated food was likely eaten within that window.
6. A screening test correctly identifies 90 out of 100 people who have a disease. This describes:
• A) Specificity
• B) Sensitivity
• C) Positive predictive value
• D) Negative predictive value
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Sensitivity answers: "How well does the test detect those who truly have the
disease?" Formula: True Positives / (True Positives + False Negatives) = 90/100 = 90%. High
sensitivity means few false negatives (missed cases).
7. A test correctly rules out disease in 80 out of 100 healthy people. This describes:
• A) Sensitivity
• B) Specificity
• C) Prevalence
• D) Incidence
Correct Answer: B
, Rationale: Specificity answers: "How well does the test identify those who do NOT have the
disease?" Formula: True Negatives / (True Negatives + False Positives) = 80/100 = 80%. High
specificity means few false positives (wrongly calling healthy people diseased).
8. Which study design is best for investigating a rare disease?
• A) Randomized controlled trial
• B) Cohort study
• C) Case-control study
• D) Cross-sectional study
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Case-control studies start with people who already have the disease (cases) and
match them with similar people without the disease (controls). Then researchers look backward
to compare past exposures. This is efficient for rare diseases because you don't need a huge
sample to find enough cases.
9. The death rate from heart disease in a county is 150 per 100,000 without age adjustment. This
is a:
• A) Age-adjusted rate
• B) Specific rate
• C) Crude mortality rate
• D) Standardized rate
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A crude rate includes all deaths in the total population without adjusting for
demographic factors like age. Since older populations have higher heart disease risk, crude rates
can be misleading for comparison between counties with different age structures.
10. Herd immunity is achieved when:
• A) Every individual in the population is vaccinated
• B) A high percentage of the population is immune, protecting the unvaccinated
• C) Natural immunity develops in all individuals