NCLEX RN Exam Bank: Incident Reporting, Sentinel Events &
Risk Management
Table of Contents
Subtopic 1: Fundamentals of Incident Reporting in Clinical Practice ................................. 2
Subtopic 2: Sentinel Events, Recognition, Reporting & Response ................................... 10
Subtopic 3: Risk Management Strategies and Patient Safety Culture ............................... 17
Subtopic 4: Legal and Ethical Aspects of Incident Reporting & Risk Management ............ 25
Subtopic 5: Just Culture, Accountability, and Staff Education ......................................... 33
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Subtopic 1: Fundamentals of Incident Reporting in Clinical
Practice
(Questions 1–20)
1. A nurse discovers that a patient received the wrong medication, but the patient has
shown no adverse effects. What is the nurse’s next step?
A. Wait to see if symptoms develop
B. Notify the physician but do not document it
C. Complete an incident report and inform the supervisor
D. Document the event in the patient chart as an error
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Regardless of patient outcome, all medication errors must be documented via
incident reporting protocols to ensure safety tracking and process improvement. Incident
reports are not part of the medical record.
2. Which of the following best describes the primary purpose of incident reporting in
healthcare?
A. To assign blame
B. To meet legal requirements
C. To identify patterns and prevent future harm
D. To discipline staff for violations
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Incident reporting is part of a risk management process aimed at improving
patient safety by identifying trends and systemic issues, not for assigning blame.
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3. Which situation requires the completion of an incident report?
A. A physician misses a patient’s appointment
B. A patient requests a new nurse
C. A nurse finds a medication without a label
D. A patient falls while trying to reach the bathroom alone
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Any patient fall is considered a reportable incident, even if there is no injury, as it
reflects on safety and requires investigation.
4. A new nurse is hesitant to fill out an incident report due to fear of retribution. What
should the charge nurse emphasize?
A. That it might affect their job performance rating
B. That they can fill it out anonymously
C. That incident reports are non-punitive and focus on safety
D. That only supervisors should report incidents
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Incident reports are designed for quality improvement and safety, not
punishment. Creating a culture of safety requires open communication.
5. What information is most critical to include in an incident report?
A. Opinions about what caused the incident
B. Assumptions about intent
C. Objective description of what occurred and patient’s condition
D. Future recommendations for policy changes
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Correct Answer: C
Rationale: An incident report should be factual, clear, and concise, focused on what
happened without speculation or blame.
6. Which event would not be classified as an incident requiring a report?
A. Needle-stick injury
B. A nurse clocking in late for a shift
C. Patient-on-staff assault
D. Administration of a medication to the wrong patient
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: While tardiness may be an HR issue, it does not directly impact patient safety
and is not typically documented in an incident report.
7. Who should complete the incident report if an error occurs during patient care?
A. The physician overseeing the case
B. The person who witnessed or was involved in the event
C. The risk management officer
D. A peer reviewing the case later
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The individual directly involved has the most accurate information and is
responsible for immediate documentation.
8. An incident report has been filed after a medication error. What should the nurse expect
next?
A. A legal hearing