TEST BANK: ATI PRIMARY CARE: ART AND
SCIENCE OF ADVANCED PRACTICE NURSING
PRIMARY CARE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST
CENTURY: A CIRCLE OF CARING 2026-2027
EDITION
TABLE OF CONTENTS
| Section | Topic | Questions |
|---------|-------|-----------|
| 1 | Foundations of Advanced Practice Nursing | 25 |
| 2 | The Circle of Caring Model | 20 |
| 3 | Health Promotion & Disease Prevention | 25 |
| 4 | Common Acute Conditions | 30 |
| 5 | Chronic Disease Management | 35 |
| 6 | Mental Health & Behavioral Medicine | 20 |
| 7 | Geriatric Primary Care | 20 |
| 8 | Women's Health | 15 |
| 9 | Men's Health | 10 |
| 10 | Pediatric & Adolescent Primary Care | 15 |
| 11 | Dermatology | 10 |
,2|Page
| 12 | Musculoskeletal & Rheumatology | 10 |
| 13 | Neurology & Special Senses | 10 |
| 14 | Pharmacology & Prescribing | 10 |
| 15 | Professional Issues & Ethics | 10 |
SECTION 1: FOUNDATIONS OF ADVANCED PRACTICE
NURSING
---
**Question 1.1**
A nurse practitioner is transitioning from a hospital-based practice to an
independent primary care setting. Which of the following best describes
the core competency that must be strengthened most significantly to
ensure success in this new role?
A) Technical procedural skills
B) Clinical judgment in acute care settings
C) Business acumen and practice management
D) Specialty referral coordination
**Answer:** C
,3|Page
**Rationale:** In independent primary care, the NP must understand
practice finances, billing, coding, staffing, legal compliance, and
operational management. While clinical skills remain essential, the
business aspects of practice represent the greatest shift from hospital-
based employment. Acute care skills (B) are less central in primary care.
Referral coordination (D) is important but is a clinical-operational
hybrid rather than the foundational shift. Technical skills (A) remain
relevant but are not the primary competency gap.
---
**Question 1.2**
A state legislature is considering legislation that would require a
collaborative practice agreement for all NPs practicing in the state.
Which of the following arguments best supports full practice authority
from an evidence-based perspective?
A) NPs have lower patient satisfaction scores than physicians
B) NPs prescribe fewer controlled substances than physicians
C) Systematic reviews demonstrate comparable outcomes between NP
and physician care
D) NPs complete fewer clinical training hours than physicians
**Answer:** C
, 4|Page
**Rationale:** Multiple systematic reviews and landmark studies (e.g.,
the 1986 Rand Corporation study, the 2010 IOM report, and numerous
subsequent meta-analyses) consistently demonstrate that NP-provided
care yields outcomes comparable to physician care across quality, safety,
and patient satisfaction metrics. This evidence forms the foundation for
arguments supporting full practice authority.
---
**Question 1.3**
A new graduate NP is negotiating their first employment contract. Which
of the following elements is most critical to have reviewed by an
attorney specializing in healthcare contracts?
A) Vacation time accrual rate
B) Continuing education reimbursement amount
C) Restrictive covenant (non-compete) clause
D) On-call schedule rotation
**Answer:** C
**Rationale:** Restrictive covenants can significantly impact future
employment opportunities by limiting geographic radius and time frame
for practice after leaving the position. These clauses are legally binding
and vary substantially by state; they require legal review to ensure