✦ MED ✦
Medication Aide Certification
AIDE State Board Examination · Practice Test Series
COMPETENCE · COMPASSION · COMPLIANCE
STATE TEST
Medication Aide Practice Tests
P H A R M A CO LO G Y · D R U G C L A SS I F I C AT I O N · C H F · I N S U L I N · CO N T R O L L E D S U BSTA N C E S · N U R S I N G
D E L E G AT I O N
ORGANIZATION State Board of Nursing / Medication Aide CERTIFICATION Certified Medication Aide (CMA / MA-C)
Registry
EXAM TYPE Practice Examination Series ACADEMIC YEAR
TOTAL QUESTIONS 30 Questions SUBJECT AREAS Pharmacology · CHF · Drug Classes · Legal
· Insulin · PDR
FORMAT Multiple Choice — Select the Single Best
Answer
PR ACTICE TEST INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Select the single best answer for each question based on the Medication Aide scope of practice and state regulations.
▸ Content covers: pharmacology basics, CHF symptoms, drug classifications, controlled substances, insulin administration rules,
PDR usage, and medication safety.
▸ Each question includes the correct answer with a detailed clinical rationale.
SECTION I — PHARMACOLOGY, DRUG ADMINISTRATION & DISEASE Questions 1 –
STATES 30
1. What are the classic symptoms of Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)?
A. Hypotension, bradycardia, and dry cough
B. Pulmonary edema, high blood pressure, and dyspnea
C. Fever, chills, and productive cough
D. Weight loss, tachycardia, and wheezing
CORRECT ANSWER B — Pulmonary edema, high blood pressure, and dyspnea
RATIONALE Congestive Heart Failure results when the heart cannot pump blood effectively, causing fluid backup. Classic
symptoms include: pulmonary edema (fluid accumulation in the lungs), hypertension (high blood pressure
from fluid overload and vasoconstriction), and dyspnea (difficulty breathing, especially when lying flat —
orthopnea). Other signs include: peripheral edema (swelling in legs/ankles), jugular vein distention,
crackles/rales on auscultation, and fatigue. Diuretics are commonly prescribed to reduce fluid volume. The
medication aide should monitor for weight gain (fluid retention), increased shortness of breath, and
worsening edema.
, 2. Drugs may have several trade names but only one:
A. Brand name
B. Chemical name
C. Generic name
D. Proprietary name
CORRECT ANSWER C — Generic name
RATIONALE Every drug has only ONE generic (official) name, which is assigned by the United States Adopted Names
(USAN) Council and is not owned by any pharmaceutical company. In contrast, a drug can have MULTIPLE
trade/brand names from different manufacturers. For example: acetaminophen (generic) = Tylenol, Tempra,
Panadol (brand names). The chemical name describes the molecular structure. The medication aide must be
familiar with both generic and common brand names to safely interpret MARs and prevent errors. The FDA
requires generic drugs to be bioequivalent to brand-name drugs.
3. A medication aide may take and record vital signs:
A. Only when specifically ordered by the physician
B. Prior to administration of medication which could affect or change the vital signs
C. At any time without restriction
D. Only when a licensed nurse is present in the room
CORRECT ANSWER B — Prior to administration of medication which could affect or change the vital signs
RATIONALE The medication aide may — and should — take and record vital signs BEFORE administering medications that
could affect them. Examples: blood pressure and pulse before anti-hypertensives, cardiac glycosides
(digoxin), or beta-blockers; respiratory rate before opioid analgesics; temperature before antipyretics. This
pre-administration assessment ensures the medication is safe to give. If vital signs are outside ordered
parameters, the medication should be HELD and the licensed nurse notified. This is a core safety
responsibility of the medication aide.
4. A person holding a current medication aide permit:
A. May administer medications independently without any supervision
B. Shall act under the authority of a person who holds a current license under state law which authorizes the individual
to administer medications
C. May prescribe medications within their scope of practice
D. May delegate medication administration to nursing assistants
CORRECT ANSWER B — Shall act under the authority of a person who holds a current license to administer medications
RATIONALE A medication aide always practices under the DELEGATION and SUPERVISION of a licensed nurse (RN or
LPN/LVN). The medication aide does NOT practice independently, cannot prescribe, and cannot delegate
medication administration to others. The licensed nurse retains accountability for the delegation. The
medication aide must work within their defined scope of practice — which typically includes: administering
routine oral, topical, and inhalation medications; documenting administration; observing and reporting; and
obtaining vital signs. Tasks outside the scope (such as administering insulin injections or IV medications) are
prohibited.