MAXE • LANIF
MA Comprehensive Assessment of Medication Administration
SAFETY · COMPETENCE · PROFESSIONALISM
FINAL
FINAL EXAM — Medication Aide
P R O F E SS I O N A L P R A C T I C E , D R U G C L A SS I F I C AT I O N S & B O DY SYST E M S
INSTITUTION Medication Aide Certification Program EXAM CODE MA-FINAL-2026
PROGRAM Medication Aide (MA) Certification ACADEMIC YEAR
EXAM TITLE Medication Aide Final Examination TOTAL QUESTIONS Comprehensive Final Exam — All Topics
COURSE TITLE Medication Aide Training Program FORMAT Multiple Choice — Select the Single Best
Answer
EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Select the single best answer for each question.
▸ Questions cover ALL medication aide domains: professional practice, scope of practice, medication administration,
documentation, safety/error prevention, drug classifications by body system, and legal/ethical considerations.
▸ Distinguish carefully between related concepts: side effects vs. adverse drug reactions, agonism vs. antagonism, systemic vs.
local effects, and various drug classes.
▸ Correct answers and detailed rationales appear below each question for comprehensive review.
▸ All content is derived from the Medication Aide Final Examination curriculum.
SECTION I — PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE, SAFETY & DRUG Final
CLASSIFICATIONS Examination
1. Which of the following is an example of documenting?
A. The medication aide submits a written request to her supervisor to change shifts.
B. The resident keeps a list of her medications at her bedside.
C. The medication aide administers eyedrops to a resident and records the event on the resident's chart.
D. The nurse provides the medication aide with a list of medications for a new resident.
CORRECT ANSWER C — The medication aide administers eyedrops to a resident and records the event on the resident's
chart. Documentation means creating a written record of care provided.
RATIONALE Documentation is the act of recording care provided — it creates a legal record. The MA must document EVERY
medication administration immediately after the resident takes it. Documentation includes: date, time,
medication name, dose, route, and MA's initials/signature. Never document before administration. Option A is
a personnel request; Option B is resident-maintained; Option D is receiving information, not documenting.
, 2. Medication aides are responsible for:
A. Administering prescription and nonprescription medications to residents according to physicians' orders and under
a nurse's supervision.
B. Administering only nonprescription medications to residents according to physicians' orders.
C. Determining which residents need assistance taking medications.
D. Deciding the amount of medication to administer to a resident based on observation.
CORRECT ANSWER A — Administering BOTH prescription and nonprescription medications according to physicians'
orders and under nurse supervision.
RATIONALE The MA administers all medications listed on the MAR — both prescription and OTC — as ordered by the
prescriber and under the delegation/supervision of a licensed nurse. MAs do NOT decide which residents
need medications (Option C — that's assessment), do NOT determine doses (Option D — that's prescribing),
and are NOT limited to only OTC medications (Option B). All administration must follow the MAR exactly.
3. Providing person-centered care includes:
A. Providing medication updates to a resident's family members.
B. Supervising other medication aides.
C. Treating all residents exactly the same.
D. Treating all residents as individuals.
CORRECT ANSWER D — Treating all residents as individuals. Person-centered care recognizes each resident's unique
needs, preferences, and circumstances.
RATIONALE Person-centered care is the opposite of "one-size-fits-all" (Option C). It means tailoring care to each individual
— considering their preferences, cultural background, communication needs, and specific health
circumstances. For medication administration, this might mean accommodating a resident's preferred time,
explaining medications in their preferred way, or respecting their routine.
4. For a medication aide, behaving professionally involves:
A. Arriving on time and leaving early.
B. Delegating tasks to other members of the care team.
C. Doing only assigned tasks that the MA is trained to do.
D. Choosing which facility policies to follow.
CORRECT ANSWER C — Doing only assigned tasks that the MA is trained to do. Working within scope of practice is a
fundamental professional responsibility.
RATIONALE Professional behavior includes: staying within scope of practice, performing only tasks for which you are
trained and competent, following facility policies consistently (not selectively — Option D is wrong), and NOT
delegating tasks (Option B — delegation is a nurse's responsibility, not the MA's). MAs should never perform
tasks beyond their training, even if asked.