TEST BANK For Pharmacology For The Primary Care Provider 4th Edition By Edmunds |All Chapters (1-73)
Test Bank for Pharmacology for the Primary Care Provider 4th Edition by Authors: Marilyn Edmunds and Maren Mayhew ISBN 9780323087902 Chapter 1-73 | Complete Guide A+
Test Bank - Pharmacology for the Primary Care Provider, 4th Edition (Edmunds, 2014), Chapter 1-73 | All Chapters
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Test Bank Pharmacology for the Primary
Care Provider, 4th Edition (Edmunds,
2014), Chapter 1-73 | All Chapters A+
, Chapter 01: Prescriptive Authority and Role Implementation:
Tradition vs. Change Test Bank
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Which of the following has influenced an emphasis on primary care education in medical
schools?
a. Changes in Medicare reimbursement methods recommended in 1992
b. Competition from nonphysicians desiring to meet primary care shortages
c. The need for monopolistic control in the marketplace of primary outpatient care
d. The recognition that nonphysicians have variable success providing primary care
ANS: A
The Physician Payment Review Commission in 1992 directly increased financial reimbursement to
clinicians who provide primary care. Coupled with a shortage of primary care providers, this incentive
led medical schools to place greater emphasis on preparing primary care physicians. Competition from
nonphysicians increased coincidentally as professionals from other disciplines stepped up to meet the
needs.
Nonphysicians have had increasing success at providing primary care and have been shown to be safe
and effective.
2. Which of the following statements is true about the prescribing practices of physicians?
a. Older physicians tend to prescribe more appropriate medications than younger physicians.
b. Antibiotic medications remain in the top five classifications of medications prescribed.
c. Most physicians rely on a “therapeutic armamentarium” that consists of less than
100 drug preparations per physician.
,d. The dominant form of drug information used by primary care physicians continues to be that
provided by pharmaceutical companies.
ANS: D
Even though most physicians claim to place little weight on drug advertisements,
pharmaceutical representatives, and patient preference and state that they rely on academic sources for
drug information, a study showed that commercial rather than scientific sources of drug information
dominated their drug information materials. Younger physicians tend to prescribe fewer and more
appropriate drugs. Antibiotics have dropped out of the top five classifications of drugs prescribed.
Most physicians have a therapeutic armamentarium of about 144 drugs.
3. As primary care nurse practitioners (NPs) continue to develop their role as prescribers of
medications, it will be important to:
a. attain the same level of expertise as
physicians who currently prescribe medications.
b. learn from the experiences of physicians and develop expertise based on evidence- based
practice.
c. maintain collaborative and supervisorial relationships with physicians who will oversee
prescribing practices.
d. develop relationships with pharmaceutical representatives to learn about new medications as
they are developed.
ANS: B
As nonphysicians develop the roles associated with prescriptive authority, it will be important to learn
from the past experiences of physicians and to develop prescribing practices based on evidence-based
medicine. It is hoped that all prescribers, including physicians and nurse practitioners, will strive to do
better than in the past. NPs should work toward prescriptive authority and for practice that is not
supervised by another professional. Pharmaceutical representatives provide information that carries
some bias. Academic sources are better.
Chapter 02: Historical Review of Prescriptive Authority: The Role of Nurses (NPs, CNMs, CRNAs,
and CNSs) and Physician Assistants
Test Bank
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. A primary care NP will begin practicing in a state in which the governor has opted out of the
federal facility reimbursement requirement. The NP should be aware that this defines how NPs may
write prescriptions:
a. without physician supervision in private practice.
b. as CRNAs without physician supervision in a hospital setting.
c. in any situation but will not be reimbursed for this by government insurers.
d. only with physician supervision in both private practice and a hospital setting.
ANS: B
In 2001, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services changed the federal physician supervision
rule for CRNAs to allow state governors to opt out, allowing CRNAs to write prescriptions and
dispense drugs without physician supervision.
a. must have a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) number to practice.
b. must have prescriptive authority to practice.
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