MAXE • LANIF
MA Administration Procedures, Vital Signs & Drug Classifications
KNOWLEDGE · PRECISION · SAFETY
FINAL
Med Aide — Final Exam
CO M P R E H E N S I V E A SS E SS M E N T: P R O C E D U R E S , V I TA L S I G N S , D R U G A C T I O N S & T E R M I N O LO G Y
INSTITUTION Medication Aide Certification Program EXAM CODE MA-FINAL-EXAM-2026
PROGRAM Medication Aide (MA) Certification ACADEMIC YEAR
EXAM TITLE Medication Aide Final Examination TOTAL QUESTIONS Comprehensive Final — 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 medication administration procedures (inhaler, nasal, crushing), vital signs (normal ranges), routes of
administration, medical abbreviations, drug classifications by therapeutic category, and medication safety.
▸ Distinguish carefully between similar drug classes (laxative types, antihypertensives, psychotropic categories) and route
abbreviations (buccal vs. sublingual, otic vs. ophthalmic).
▸ 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 — PROCEDURES, VITAL SIGNS, DRUG CLASSIFICATIONS & Final
TERMINOLOGY Examination
1. If a medication aide suspects abuse, to whom should they report it?
A. Directly to the police without informing anyone at the facility
B. To the person in charge of direction and monitoring (supervisor/charge nurse)
C. To the resident's family members first
D. Only document it in the chart — no verbal report is needed
CORRECT ANSWER B — Report to the person in charge of direction and monitoring (supervisor/charge nurse). Follow the
chain of command per facility policy.
RATIONALE Medication aides are mandated reporters — any suspicion of abuse (physical, emotional, financial, neglect)
must be reported immediately to the supervisor/charge nurse who will initiate the formal reporting process to
Adult Protective Services and/or law enforcement per state law. Documentation is important but does not
replace verbal reporting. Family should not be notified before proper authorities.
, 2. Controlled substances must be:
A. Stored in an unlocked cabinet for easy access
B. Signed out on a special controlled substance sheet following facility policy
C. Kept at the nurse's station without documentation
D. Administered without any special record-keeping
CORRECT ANSWER B — Signed out on a special controlled substance sheet following facility policy. Controlled substances
require strict documentation and accountability.
RATIONALE Controlled substances (Schedules II–V) require: double-locked storage, perpetual inventory count, sign-out
on a special controlled substance log for each dose (resident name, date/time, dose, route, reason, witness
for waste), and count verification at each shift change by two staff members. Any discrepancy must be
reported immediately. This prevents drug diversion and ensures regulatory compliance.
3. When crushing medications, the correct procedure is to:
A. Crush all medications together in one pill crusher to save time
B. Place the medication between two souffle cups and pull down the handle on the crusher
C. Crush medications with the back of a spoon on the counter
D. All medications can be crushed regardless of their form
CORRECT ANSWER B — Place the medication between two souffle cups and pull down the handle on the crusher. This is
the proper technique using a pill crusher.
RATIONALE Proper crushing technique: use a clean pill crusher, place medication between two souffle/medication cups,
and use the crusher handle. IMPORTANT: NOT all medications can be crushed — enteric-coated,
extended/sustained-release (XR, SR, CR, LA), and sublingual/buccal forms must NEVER be crushed. Crushing
these can cause toxicity or destroy the drug's delivery mechanism. Always verify with the MAR and pharmacist
before crushing.
4. When administering inhaler medications, the medication aide should instruct the resident to:
A. Exhale quickly after inhaling the medication
B. Inhale through the mouth and wait/hold breath for 10 seconds
C. Breathe normally without any special technique
D. Swallow the medication instead of inhaling it
CORRECT ANSWER B — Inhale through the mouth and hold breath for approximately 10 seconds to allow medication
deposition in the lungs.
RATIONALE Proper inhaler technique: (1) Shake the inhaler; (2) Exhale fully; (3) Place mouthpiece in mouth, seal lips; (4)
Press canister while beginning a slow, deep inhalation; (5) Hold breath for 10 seconds (allows medication
particles to settle in airways); (6) Exhale slowly. If a second puff is prescribed, wait 1 minute between puffs.
Rinse mouth after corticosteroid inhalers to prevent oral thrush.