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Certified Medication Aide (CMA) Exam Test | (Latest 2026/2027 Update) | Complete Exam Questions with Verified Answers and Detailed Rationales | MACE™ Content Outline, 7 Rights | A+ Graded | NCSBN / Credentia

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INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD - This is the comprehensive exam test preparation guide for the Certified Medication Aide (CMA) / Qualified Medication Aide (QMA) competency examination, also known as the Medication Aide Certification Examination (MACE™) (Latest 2026/2027 Update), featuring verified exam questions with correct answers and detailed rationales aligned with the official NCSBN MACE content outline and state board standards (OH, IN, KS, NC, VA, OK, TX, and other states). The MACE exam consists of 60-65 multiple-choice questions covering four core domains: Authorized Duties (14%), Medication Administration (40%), Medication Concepts and Measurements (30%), and Observation, Care and Reporting (16%). Test-takers are required to achieve varying state-specific passing scores (typically 70-80%). Ohio Regulation Update - Effective September 14, 2025: Ohio Administrative Code establishes the standard curriculum for certified medication aide programs effective September 14, 2025, including required supervised clinical practice of not less than sixteen hours in medication administration under one-on-one direction and supervision of a nurse in a nursing home or residential care facility. Students must complete didactic and laboratory components prior to participating in the supervised clinical component. The standard curriculum includes safe medication administration standards, communication and interpersonal skills, resident rights (including the absolute right to refuse medications), six rights of medication administration, drug terminology, storage and disposal, basic pharmacology and drug classifications (including Schedule II, III, IV, and V controlled substances), safe administration of all approved routes, proper resident positioning, measurement of apical pulse and blood pressure in association with routine medication administration, principles of standard precautions, and documentation in residents' clinical records. Oklahoma Regulation: The certified medication aide examination includes 65 questions distributed across: Administer Medication (41% / 27 questions), Observe, Report, and Document Client Status (14% / 9 questions), Comply with Legal and Ethical Guidelines (18% / 12 questions), Apply Principles of Safety (8% / 5 questions), Apply Knowledge of Measurement Systems (8% / 5 questions), and Apply Knowledge of Body Systems and Common Diseases (11% / 7 questions). Passing score is 70%. Kansas Regulation: The Certified Medication Aide (CMA) course covers 75 clock hours as required by the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS), including 50 hours of instructional learning and 25 hours of clinical time. The program leads to state-required licensure in Kansas and prepares students to take the examination developed by KDADS. Indiana Regulation: Completion of HLSC 105 - Qualified Medication Aide Preparation course (4 credit hours) prepares healthcare professionals to safely and effectively administer medications in the long-term care setting. Individuals who successfully complete this course are eligible to apply for the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH) competency evaluation test for Qualified Medication Aides. North Carolina Regulation: The North Carolina Medication Aide Registry for Nursing Homes operates under state nursing home rules and statutes, with oversight from the Division of Health Service Regulation (DHSR) Adult Care Licensure Section. To work as a medication aide in a nursing home, an individual must be listed on the North Carolina Medication Aide Registry for Nursing Homes AND listed on the North Carolina Nurse Aide I Registry with no substantiated findings on the North Carolina Health Care Personnel Registry. A substantiated finding on the Health Care Personnel Registry disqualifies the medication aide from employment in a nursing home. For Adult Care facilities (Adult Care Homes, Assisted Living Facilities, Family Care Homes), anyone administering medications who is not authorized by occupational laws must complete the North Carolina state-approved Medication Aide training program for Adult Care Homes. Virginia Regulation: Virginia mandates all RMA candidates complete a 68-hour board-approved program: 40 hours of didactic instruction, 20 hours of supervised clinical skills practice (including up to 20% simulation), and an 8-hour insulin administration module. Authorized duties include administration of oral, topical, eye/ear/nasal drops, inhalants, transdermal patches, vaginal/rectal suppositories, epinephrine auto-injectors, glucagon, diuretics (with order), and insulin (with board-approved 8-hour module). Prohibited tasks include IM/IV/subcutaneous injections (except insulin/glucagon/epinephrine), mixing medications, prepouring, accepting verbal orders for new prescriptions, and G-tube/J-tube access in assisted living settings. Medication Administration - Six/Seven/Eight Rights (Core Exam Focus): Foundational to medication safety are the Six Rights: Right Resident (using two identifiers - name and date of birth), Right Medication (three checks), Right Dose, Right Route, Right Time (1-hour window before or after scheduled time), Right Documentation (immediate MAR documentation). Some state standards expand to Seven Rights (Right Reason) or Eight Rights (Right Response). The three checks are performed: when taking medication from storage, when preparing medication, and before returning container to storage/at bedside. Patient Rights & Identification (high-frequency exam topic): The most accurate method to identify a patient before administering medications is to check the medication administration record (MAR) AND ask the patient to state their date of birth (or other identifier). Two patient identifiers are required, and the aide should ask the patient to state their identifiers rather than asking leading "yes/no" questions. Patients have the absolute legal right to refuse medication, regardless of reason. The aide must respect the right to refuse, document the refusal (including the patient's reason, if given), and report it immediately to the charge nurse. Coercing or hiding medication is considered assault/battery and a violation of patient rights. Definition of Medication Error: When a drug is given any other way than how it was prescribed. Any deviation from the prescriber's order (wrong dose, wrong time, wrong route, wrong patient, wrong medication, omitted dose) constitutes an error. Medication errors must be reported immediately to the supervisor. Delayed reporting is itself a violation.

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National Healthcareer Association




MAXE • AMC
CMA Certified Medication Aide (CMA) Program
COMPETENCE • COMPASSION • COMPLIANCE
EST. 2026




Certified Medication Aide — Practice Examination
CO M P R E H E N S I V E A SS E SS M E N T F O R M E D I C AT I O N A D M I N I ST R AT I O N

INSTITUTION National Healthcareer Association (NHA) PROGRAM Certified Medication Aide (CMA)
ACADEMIC YEAR EXAM TITLE Medication Aide Certification Examination
TOTAL QUESTIONS 50 Questions FORMAT Multiple Choice — Select the Single Best
Answer


EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Select the single best answer for each question. All questions are multiple choice.
▸ Questions cover medication administration, safety, pharmacology, and regulatory compliance.
▸ Pay close attention to scope of practice, rights of medication administration, and resident safety.
▸ Correct answers and rationales are provided for study and review purposes.
▸ This examination is designed to prepare candidates for the NHA Certified Medication Aide exam.


SECTION I — MEDICATION ADMINISTRATION, SAFETY & Questions 1 –
PHARMACOLOGY 50

1. A medication aide (MA) is not usually allowed to administer a drug under which circumstance?
A. When the resident has taken it many times before
B. If it is the first time a resident takes it
C. When it is a PRN medication
D. If it is a controlled substance
CORRECT ANSWER B — If it is the first time a resident takes it

RATIONALE A medication aide is generally not permitted to administer a drug that is being given to a resident for the first
time. The first dose of a new medication requires close observation for allergic reactions, adverse effects, and
therapeutic response — assessment responsibilities that fall within the licensed nurse's scope of practice.
Once the resident has tolerated the medication and it is established on the MAR, the MA may administer
subsequent doses within their scope of practice. This protects resident safety by ensuring initial response is
monitored by the most qualified personnel.

,2. Which of the following is an example of a drug-disease interaction?
A. Two drugs compete for the same receptor site
B. A person with hypertension has elevated blood pressure after taking an OTC cold medication
C. Grapefruit juice alters drug metabolism
D. A resident takes two drugs that both cause drowsiness
CORRECT ANSWER B — A person with hypertension has elevated blood pressure after taking an OTC cold medication

RATIONALE A drug-disease interaction occurs when a medication worsens a pre-existing medical condition. OTC cold
medications often contain decongestants (e.g., pseudoephedrine) that cause vasoconstriction and can
elevate blood pressure — particularly dangerous in a person with hypertension. Option A describes a drug-
drug interaction (receptor competition). Option C describes a drug-food interaction. Option D describes an
additive drug-drug interaction. Recognizing drug-disease interactions is a critical safety skill for medication
aides.


3. A nebulizer or inhaler does this to a drug so that it may be inhaled and reach the lungs:
A. Dilutes it
B. Suspends it in liquid
C. Aerosolizes it
D. Pressurizes it into a solid
CORRECT ANSWER C — Aerosolizes it

RATIONALE Nebulizers and inhalers convert liquid medication into a fine mist or aerosol (aerosolization), creating tiny
droplets small enough to be carried by inhaled air deep into the bronchial tree and alveoli. A nebulizer uses
compressed air or ultrasonic power to produce the mist over several minutes; a metered-dose inhaler (MDI)
uses a propellant to deliver a measured dose instantly. Without aerosolization, liquid medication would not
reach the lower airways and would be deposited in the mouth and throat, providing no therapeutic benefit
for pulmonary conditions.


4. Not shaking a liquid medication that requires shaking is an example of:
A. Malpractice
B. Negligence
C. A medication error that does not need to be reported
D. Assault
CORRECT ANSWER B — Negligence

RATIONALE Negligence is the failure to exercise the standard of care that a reasonably prudent person would exercise in
similar circumstances. Not shaking a liquid medication labeled "shake well before use" is a failure to follow
manufacturer instructions and standard administration procedures. Suspension medications have drug
particles that settle to the bottom; failure to shake results in the resident receiving either an underdose (from
the top) or an overdose (from the bottom). This constitutes negligence because the MA knew or should have
known that shaking was required. Malpractice is a specific type of negligence by a licensed professional.

, 5. What is a topical medication?
A. A tablet dissolved under the tongue
B. An ointment that is applied to the skin
C. A suppository inserted rectally
D. A medication inhaled into the lungs
CORRECT ANSWER B — An ointment that is applied to the skin

RATIONALE Topical medications are applied directly to the skin or mucous membranes for local effect. They include
ointments, creams, lotions, gels, pastes, and transdermal patches. The medication acts at the site of
application rather than being absorbed into systemic circulation in significant amounts (though some
systemic absorption may occur). Topical medications are used to treat skin conditions (eczema, psoriasis,
infections), provide local pain relief, or deliver drugs transdermally. A sublingual tablet (A) is a buccal/oral
mucosal route; a suppository (C) is a rectal or vaginal route; an inhaled medication (D) is a pulmonary route.


6. If a resident's MAR indicates that the pulse rate should be counted before administering a medication, how often
does the MA need to count and document the resident's pulse rate?
A. Once per shift
B. Only when the resident requests it
C. Every time that medication is administered
D. Once per week
CORRECT ANSWER C — Every time that medication is administered

RATIONALE When the MAR specifies that pulse rate should be checked before administration (common with digoxin, beta-
blockers, and certain calcium channel blockers), this must be done before every single dose. The purpose is
to detect bradycardia or irregular rhythms that would contraindicate giving the medication. For example,
digoxin is typically held if the pulse is below 60 bpm. Documenting the pulse rate each time provides a legal
record that the safety check was performed and protects the MA and facility. Skipping this check could result
in administering a dose that causes dangerous bradycardia or heart block.


7. Which of the following is an example of respecting a resident's right to participate in her own care?
A. Administering medication without explanation to save time
B. Respecting the resident's right to refuse a medication
C. Insisting the resident take all medications as ordered
D. Hiding medication in food without the resident's knowledge
CORRECT ANSWER B — Respecting the resident's right to refuse a medication

RATIONALE Residents have the legal and ethical right to refuse any medication or treatment. Respecting this right is a
fundamental principle of resident-centered care and is protected by federal regulations (OBRA 1987). The MA
should inform the nurse of the refusal, document it appropriately, and — where appropriate — explore the
resident's reasons for refusal. Forcing medication, hiding it in food without consent, or administering without
explanation violates resident rights and can constitute battery. The MA should educate residents about their
medications but ultimately honor their decisions regarding their own bodies.

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