Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

NYS INFECTION CONTROL MANDATED TRAINING | Questions with Correct Answers | NYSDOH Approved | Healthcare Compliance | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
99
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
31-03-2026
Written in
2025/2026

Pass the New York State Infection Control Mandated Training Exam on your first attempt with this comprehensive Q&A guide featuring correct answers! This A+ Graded resource for the NYS Department of Health (NYSDOH) Infection Control Mandated Training contains verified questions with correct answers covering all essential infection control concepts required for healthcare professionals in New York. Featuring comprehensive coverage of standard precautions, transmission-based precautions (contact, droplet, airborne) , hand hygiene protocols, personal protective equipment (PPE) selection and use, sterilization and disinfection procedures, bloodborne pathogens and OSHA standards, needlestick safety and prevention, healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) , multi-drug resistant organisms (MDROs) , Clostridioides difficile (C. diff) , sepsis recognition and prevention, respiratory hygiene and cough etiquette, environmental infection control, and NYS Public Health Law compliance, it provides the exact practice needed to master the official NYS Infection Control mandated training assessment. With detailed rationales, real-world clinical scenarios, NYSDOH regulation references, and our Pass Guarantee, this is the definitive tool for physicians, nurses, dentists, and healthcare professionals seeking NYS infection control compliance. Download now and complete your NYS mandated training with confidence!

Show more Read less
Institution
NYS INFECTION CONTROL MANDATED TRAINING
Course
NYS INFECTION CONTROL MANDATED TRAINING

Content preview

​NYS INFECTION CONTROL MANDATED​
​TRAINING 2025-2026 | Questions with​
​Correct Answers | NYSDOH Approved |​
​Healthcare Compliance | Pass Guaranteed -​
​A+ Graded​


[​VERIFIED NYSDOH INFECTION CONTROL STANDARDS | 200+ QUESTIONS | 7 DOMAINS​
​| GRADED A+]​
​[DOMAIN 1: CHAIN OF INFECTION & MODES OF TRANSMISSION - 30 Questions]​
​Question 1​
​The Chain of Infection consists of six sequential links. Which of the following represents the​
​correct first link in the chain?​
​A) Portal of Exit​
​B) Reservoir [CORRECT]​
​C) Mode of Transmission​
​D) Susceptible Host​
​Rationale: The Chain of Infection begins with the Infectious Agent (pathogen) and Reservoir​
​(where the pathogen lives and multiplies). The reservoir can be humans, animals,​
​environmental surfaces, or equipment. Without a reservoir, the pathogen cannot survive to​
​cause infection. The sequence is: Infectious Agent → Reservoir → Portal of Exit → Mode of​
​Transmission → Portal of Entry → Susceptible Host.​
​Question 2​
​Which of the following is NOT considered a portal of exit for infectious agents?​
​A) Respiratory tract​
​B) Gastrointestinal tract​
​C) Intact skin [CORRECT]​
​D) Bloodstream​
​Rationale: Intact skin serves as a protective barrier and is not a portal of exit. Pathogens exit​
​through respiratory tract (coughing, sneezing), gastrointestinal tract (feces, vomit), blood​
​(needlestick, bleeding wounds), mucous membranes, and non-intact skin (open wounds). Intact​
​skin actually acts as a defense mechanism against infection transmission.​
​Question 3​
​A patient with influenza coughs and produces respiratory droplets that travel 4 feet and land on​
​a healthcare worker's face. This represents which mode of transmission?​
​A) Airborne transmission​

,​ ) Droplet transmission [CORRECT]​
B
​C) Direct contact transmission​
​D) Vector-borne transmission​
​Rationale: Droplet transmission involves respiratory droplets >5 microns that travel ≤3 feet​
​(though some references indicate up to 6 feet). Influenza is transmitted via droplets, not​
​airborne particles. Airborne transmission involves droplet nuclei <5 microns that remain​
​suspended in air and travel long distances. The droplet size and typical travel distance​
​distinguish these modes.​
​Question 4​
​Which disease is transmitted via the airborne route according to CDC and NYSDOH guidelines?​
​A) Influenza​
​B) Pertussis​
​C) Measles (Rubeola) [CORRECT]​
​D) Meningococcal disease​
​Rationale: Measles (Rubeola), varicella (chickenpox), disseminated zoster, and tuberculosis​
​require Airborne Precautions. These diseases produce small droplet nuclei (<5 microns) that​
​remain suspended in air for prolonged periods. Influenza, pertussis, and meningococcal disease​
​require Droplet Precautions as they are transmitted via larger respiratory droplets.​
​Question 5​
​A healthcare worker touches a contaminated bed rail and then rubs their eyes, becoming​
​infected. Which link in the Chain of Infection does the bed rail represent?​
​A) Portal of Exit​
​B) Reservoir​
​C) Mode of Transmission (Indirect Contact) [CORRECT]​
​D) Portal of Entry​
​Rationale: The contaminated bed rail serves as a vehicle for indirect contact transmission. The​
​pathogen was transmitted from the reservoir (previous patient) via the contaminated object​
​(fomite) to the new host. This represents indirect contact transmission, the most common mode​
​of transmission in healthcare settings.​
​Question 6​
​Which of the following is the most common mode of transmission in healthcare settings?​
​A) Airborne transmission​
​B) Droplet transmission​
​C) Contact transmission [CORRECT]​
​D) Vector-borne transmission​
​Rationale: Contact transmission (both direct and indirect) is the most common mode of​
​transmission in healthcare settings. Direct contact involves person-to-person physical contact,​
​while indirect contact involves contaminated intermediate objects (fomites) such as equipment,​
​environmental surfaces, or healthcare worker hands. This highlights the critical importance of​
​hand hygiene and environmental cleaning.​
​Question 7​
​A patient with MRSA has wound drainage. The drainage contains the pathogen. In the Chain of​
​Infection, the wound drainage represents which link?​
​A) Infectious Agent​

,​ ) Reservoir​
B
​C) Portal of Exit [CORRECT]​
​D) Mode of Transmission​
​Rationale: The wound drainage serves as the portal of exit—the means by which the infectious​
​agent (MRSA) leaves the reservoir (the infected patient). Other portals of exit include respiratory​
​secretions, blood, gastrointestinal contents, and genitourinary secretions.​
​Question 8​
​Which factor makes a patient a "susceptible host" for infection?​
​A) Recent vaccination against influenza​
​B) Intact immune system​
​C) Immunosuppression due to chemotherapy [CORRECT]​
​D) Age between 20-40 years​
​Rationale: Susceptible hosts are individuals with increased risk of infection due to compromised​
​defense mechanisms. Factors include immunosuppression (chemotherapy, HIV/AIDS,​
​transplant medications), extremes of age (neonates and elderly), chronic diseases (diabetes),​
​malnutrition, invasive procedures, and breaks in skin integrity. Vaccination and intact immune​
​systems provide protection.​
​Question 9​
​Breaking which link in the Chain of Infection would be MOST effective in preventing​
​healthcare-associated infections?​
​A) Infectious Agent only​
​B) Any single link [CORRECT]​
​C) Mode of Transmission and Portal of Entry only​
​D) Susceptible Host only​
​Rationale: Breaking ANY single link in the Chain of Infection prevents transmission. This is a​
​fundamental principle of infection control. Whether through eliminating the agent (sterilization),​
​removing the reservoir (environmental cleaning), blocking portals of exit (masks), interrupting​
​transmission (hand hygiene, PPE), protecting portals of entry (intact skin), or protecting​
​susceptible hosts (vaccination), interrupting any link stops the chain.​
​Question 10​
​A mosquito transmits malaria to a patient. This represents which mode of transmission?​
​A) Common vehicle transmission​
​B) Vector-borne transmission [CORRECT]​
​C) Airborne transmission​
​D) Droplet transmission​
​Rationale: Vector-borne transmission involves living organisms (vectors) that carry and transmit​
​infectious agents. Mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas are common vectors. This differs from common​
​vehicle transmission (contaminated food, water, medication) and airborne/droplet transmission​
​(respiratory routes).​
​Question 11​
​Which of the following represents a "common vehicle" transmission?​
​A) Needlestick injury from contaminated needle​
​B) Food poisoning from contaminated cafeteria food [CORRECT]​
​C) Coughing droplets onto another person​

, ​ ) Touching a contaminated stethoscope​
D
​Rationale: Common vehicle transmission occurs when multiple people are exposed to a​
​contaminated source such as food, water, medications, or equipment. Foodborne outbreaks in​
​healthcare settings represent common vehicle transmission. Needlestick injuries represent​
​percutaneous transmission, coughing represents droplet transmission, and contaminated​
​stethoscopes represent indirect contact transmission.​
​Question 12​
​The portal of entry for many respiratory pathogens is:​
​A) Gastrointestinal tract​
​B) Respiratory tract (inhalation) [CORRECT]​
​C) Intact skin​
​D) Genitourinary tract​
​Rationale: Respiratory pathogens typically enter through the respiratory tract via inhalation of​
​infectious droplets or droplet nuclei. This is their specific portal of entry. Other pathogens have​
​specific portals: gastrointestinal pathogens enter via ingestion, bloodborne pathogens via​
​percutaneous exposure or mucous membrane contact, and skin pathogens via breaks in skin​
​integrity.​
​Question 13​
​A patient with Clostridioides difficile (C. diff) has spores on their hands and touches a doorknob.​
​A second patient touches the doorknob and then eats lunch without hand washing. Which links​
​in the Chain of Infection are involved?​
​A) Only Mode of Transmission​
​B) Reservoir, Portal of Exit, Mode of Transmission, Portal of Entry [CORRECT]​
​C) Only Reservoir and Susceptible Host​
​D) All six links​
​Rationale: This scenario involves: Reservoir (first patient's gastrointestinal tract), Portal of Exit​
​(hands contaminated with fecal matter/spores), Mode of Transmission (indirect contact via​
​fomite/doorknob), and Portal of Entry (second patient's mouth during eating). The Infectious​
​Agent (C. diff spores) and Susceptible Host (second patient) are also present, meaning all six​
​links are actually involved.​
​Question 14​
​Which characteristic distinguishes airborne transmission from droplet transmission?​
​A) The type of infectious agent​
​B) Particle size and suspension time in air [CORRECT]​
​C) The presence of symptoms in the source patient​
​D) The need for isolation precautions​
​Rationale: The critical distinction is particle size: airborne particles are <5 microns (droplet​
​nuclei) and remain suspended in air for prolonged periods, traveling long distances. Droplet​
​particles are >5 microns, travel short distances (≤3-6 feet), and settle quickly due to gravity.​
​Both require isolation precautions, but different types (Airborne vs. Droplet).​
​Question 15​
​An animal serves as the reservoir for which of the following?​
​A) Tuberculosis​
​B) Rabies [CORRECT]​

Written for

Institution
NYS INFECTION CONTROL MANDATED TRAINING
Course
NYS INFECTION CONTROL MANDATED TRAINING

Document information

Uploaded on
March 31, 2026
Number of pages
99
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

€9,04
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
oketchnyasakwa

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
oketchnyasakwa Chamberlain College Of Nursing
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
2
Member since
3 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
363
Last sold
3 weeks ago

0,0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions