CCPP Practice Test (V1)
Dive into practice questions
Question 1
A pharmacist is establishing a Collaborative Practice Agreement (CPA) with a primary care physician to manage patients with hypertension. Which of the following elements is MOST essential for the CPA to be legally valid and functional?
Question 2
Under a CPA for anticoagulation management, a CCPP reviews a patient’s INR, which is found to be 4.5 (goal 2.0-3.0). The patient has no signs of active bleeding. According to the agreed-upon protocol, what is the pharmacist’s most appropriate action?
Question 3
A key component of successful collaborative practice is effective communication. A pharmacist working under a CPA identifies a significant drug interaction for a patient of a collaborating physician. What is the most appropriate method to communicate this finding?
Question 4
When a pharmacist is managing a patient’s diabetes under a CPA, which of the following activities falls outside the typical scope of such an agreement?
Answer Key
- Question 1: B. A detailed protocol outlining the specific functions and disease states the pharmacist is authorized to manage, including initiating, modifying, and discontinuing therapy. (The core of a CPA is the protocol that explicitly defines the pharmacist’s scope of authority, which is essential for both legal protection and clinical clarity.)
- Question 2: B. Advise the patient to hold the next one to two doses of warfarin and recheck their INR in 3-5 days, while documenting the intervention. (This is a standard, guideline-based action for a subtherapeutic INR without bleeding that would be pre-defined in an anticoagulation CPA protocol, allowing the pharmacist to act autonomously.)
- Question 3: C. Sending a secure, direct message via the electronic health record (EHR) to the physician detailing the interaction, its potential consequences, and a recommended action. (This method is direct, secure, timely, and creates a documented record of the communication and intervention, representing best practice for interprofessional collaboration.)
- Question 4: B. Independently diagnosing a patient with new-onset type 2 diabetes. (Diagnosis is a function reserved for physicians or other primary care providers. A pharmacist’s role under a CPA begins after a diagnosis has been established, focusing on the management of the diagnosed condition.)