Skip to contentMCQ on Hospital Pharmacy Management
π’ Easy (1β20)
- What is the primary function of a hospital pharmacy?
a) Conduct clinical trials
b) Manufacture cosmetics
c) Dispense medications to inpatients β
d) Sell OTC drugs only
Explanation: Hospital pharmacies focus on inpatient care and medication dispensing. - Who is responsible for managing the hospital pharmacy?
a) Chief surgeon
b) Pharmacist in-charge β
c) Nurse supervisor
d) Hospital administrator
Explanation: The pharmacist-in-charge oversees pharmacy operations. - Which of the following is a component of hospital formulary?
a) List of staff
b) List of food items
c) List of approved drugs β
d) List of lab equipment
Explanation: The formulary includes drugs approved for use in the hospital. - Which record is essential in hospital pharmacy?
a) Class schedule
b) Patient diet record
c) Drug inventory record β
d) Visitor register
Explanation: Inventory records help maintain stock and prevent shortages. - The term βfloor stockβ refers to:
a) Office furniture
b) Emergency equipment
c) Medications stored in wards β
d) Lab chemicals
Explanation: Floor stock is readily available medication in hospital wards. - Which form of prescription is used in hospitals?
a) Retail bill
b) Inpatient prescription β
c) OPD receipt
d) Discharge slip
Explanation: Inpatient prescriptions are used to treat admitted patients. - Hospital pharmacy is classified under:
a) Industrial pharmacy
b) Retail pharmacy
c) Institutional pharmacy β
d) Mail-order pharmacy
Explanation: It is a type of institutional pharmacy, serving a hospital. - What is a unit dose system?
a) A bulk drug supply
b) Drug given once a week
c) Individually packed dose per patient β
d) A multi-drug injection
Explanation: It enhances safety by delivering single-use doses. - Which department does a hospital pharmacist collaborate with?
a) Catering
b) Surgery β
c) Parking
d) Housekeeping
Explanation: Pharmacists work closely with clinical departments like surgery. - Which route is most commonly used in hospitals?
a) Oral β
b) Ocular
c) Intrathecal
d) Topical
Explanation: Oral administration is common due to ease and safety. - Cytotoxic drugs should be handled in:
a) General stores
b) Class II biosafety cabinet β
c) Open tables
d) Kitchen
Explanation: A biosafety cabinet ensures safe handling of hazardous drugs. - Which organization regulates hospital pharmacies in India?
a) ICMR
b) PCI β
c) AIIMS
d) WHO
Explanation: The Pharmacy Council of India sets guidelines for practice. - Emergency medications are stored in:
a) Lockers
b) Emergency drug tray β
c) Library
d) File cabinet
Explanation: Emergency trays are quickly accessible for urgent needs. - Which of the following is a function of hospital pharmacy?
a) Selling cosmetics
b) Clinical trials
c) Drug storage and distribution β
d) Advertising drugs
Explanation: Drug procurement, storage, and distribution are key roles. - Hospital pharmacists participate in:
a) Surgical procedures
b) Clinical rounds β
c) Construction
d) Laundry
Explanation: They offer drug-related input during ward rounds. - Which record is maintained for narcotic drugs?
a) Visitor log
b) Prescription pad
c) Narcotic register β
d) Salary sheet
Explanation: Legal compliance requires accurate narcotic records. - Cold chain management is important for:
a) Ointments
b) Vaccines β
c) Bandages
d) Tablets
Explanation: Vaccines must be stored under specific temperature conditions. - Which is a parenteral dosage form?
a) Tablet
b) Capsule
c) Injection β
d) Ointment
Explanation: Parenteral refers to non-oral routes, typically injections. - Hospital formulary is prepared by:
a) Pathologist
b) Drug and Therapeutics Committee (DTC) β
c) Radiologist
d) Storekeeper
Explanation: DTC ensures rational drug use in the hospital. - Which schedule of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act covers hospital drug labeling in India?
a) Schedule H β
b) Schedule F
c) Schedule J
d) Schedule P
Explanation: Schedule H drugs are prescription-only and used in hospitals.
π‘ Moderate (21β40)
- What is the advantage of a unit dose system?
a) Cost-saving
b) Increased errors
c) Reduces medication errors β
d) Time-consuming
Explanation: It ensures precise dosing and minimizes mistakes. - Which document helps in tracking drug usage trends?
a) Attendance log
b) Medication Administration Record (MAR) β
c) Lab report
d) Discharge summary
Explanation: MAR records drug use per patient. - Which of the following is a sterile product?
a) Ointment
b) Tablet
c) Injection β
d) Capsule
Explanation: Injections must be sterile to prevent infection. - What is the ideal temperature for refrigerated drug storage?
a) 0β2Β°C
b) 2β8Β°C β
c) 8β12Β°C
d) 10β20Β°C
Explanation: Most biologics and vaccines require 2β8Β°C. - The term ‘extemporaneous preparation’ means:
a) Preparing meals
b) Manufacturing drugs
c) On-demand compounding of medication β
d) Storing expired drugs
Explanation: It refers to custom preparation of drugs for a specific patient. - Which system reduces drug wastage in hospital pharmacies?
a) Bulk dispensing
b) Floor stock
c) Unit dose β
d) Manual counting
Explanation: Accurate, single-dose dispensing minimizes leftovers. - What is pharmacy and therapeutic committeeβs main function?
a) Conduct lab tests
b) Develop drug policies β
c) Perform surgery
d) Maintain accounts
Explanation: The PTC ensures safe, effective drug use. - Which of these is an advantage of central pharmacy?
a) Easy misuse
b) High wastage
c) Centralized inventory control β
d) Duplication of services
Explanation: Central pharmacies ensure uniform management. - Which drug category needs separate storage in hospitals?
a) Antibiotics
b) Antacids
c) Narcotics β
d) Multivitamins
Explanation: Narcotics are high-risk and require locked storage. - Which technique helps reduce drug interactions in hospitals?
a) Use of expired drugs
b) Random prescriptions
c) Electronic prescribing β
d) Manual typing
Explanation: Electronic systems check for interactions and errors. - Which is not a hospital pharmacy responsibility?
a) Drug procurement
b) Waste disposal
c) Drug advertisement β
d) Inventory control
Explanation: Advertising is not part of pharmacy practice. - Which parameter is critical for injectable drug quality?
a) Taste
b) Color
c) Sterility β
d) Solubility
Explanation: Injectables must be free from microbes. - A satellite pharmacy is located:
a) At hospital entrance
b) Near patient care areas β
c) Off-site
d) In the library
Explanation: Satellite pharmacies serve specific wards or ICUs. - Who is authorized to prescribe drugs in hospitals?
a) Pharmacist
b) Physician β
c) Nurse
d) Receptionist
Explanation: Physicians write prescriptions; pharmacists dispense them. - Which method is used for narcotic drug audit?
a) Visual check
b) Serial counting β
c) Random guess
d) Oral questioning
Explanation: Serial number audits ensure accountability. - Which device maintains cold storage?
a) Heater
b) Deep freezer β
c) Oven
d) Thermometer
Explanation: Freezers store temperature-sensitive drugs. - Pharmacovigilance in hospitals refers to:
a) Drug cost analysis
b) ADR monitoring β
c) Patient registration
d) Room allocation
Explanation: Pharmacovigilance detects and reports adverse drug reactions. - A key factor in drug formulary selection is:
a) Popularity
b) Cost-effectiveness β
c) Brand loyalty
d) Manufacturer origin
Explanation: Economical yet effective drugs are preferred. - Stock verification helps prevent:
a) Staff promotion
b) Drug shortages β
c) Patient delay
d) Increased salaries
Explanation: It ensures adequate availability of drugs. - Which of the following is a high-alert medication?
a) Paracetamol
b) Morphine β
c) Vitamin C
d) Cough syrup
Explanation: High-alert drugs require special handling due to potential harm.
π΄ Hard (41β50)
- Which method ensures sterility in compounded injectables?
a) Boiling
b) Filtration through 0.22 micron filter β
c) Sun drying
d) Hand mixing
Explanation: Filtration removes microorganisms from solutions. - What is an ADC in hospital pharmacy?
a) Automated Dispensing Cabinet β
b) Antidepressant Drug Chart
c) Automatic Drug Capsule
d) Assisted Drug Coding
Explanation: ADCs automate medication storage and retrieval. - A satellite pharmacy is most useful in:
a) Cafeteria
b) Emergency and ICU β
c) Waiting area
d) Garden
Explanation: Satellite pharmacies speed up emergency drug delivery. - A prescription audit is conducted to:
a) Punish doctors
b) Improve prescribing habits β
c) Advertise drugs
d) Reduce treatment
Explanation: It ensures rational drug use and cost control. - Look-alike sound-alike (LASA) drug errors can be prevented by:
a) Ignoring similar names
b) Tall man lettering β
c) Mixing brands
d) Handwritten labels only
Explanation: Emphasizing different parts of names reduces confusion. - Barcode medication administration system helps in:
a) Branding
b) Inventory selling
c) Reducing administration errors β
d) Manufacturing
Explanation: Scanning ensures correct patient and dose. - A hospital pharmacist’s clinical role includes:
a) Writing prescriptions
b) Recommending therapeutic alternatives β
c) Diagnosing disease
d) Performing surgery
Explanation: They advise on drug selection and interactions. - Which is a key KPI (Key Performance Indicator) in hospital pharmacy?
a) Number of surgeries
b) Drug wastage rate β
c) Patient meals
d) Laundry cost
Explanation: KPIs like wastage help improve performance. - Aseptic techniques are applied during:
a) Patient consultation
b) Oral dosing
c) Parenteral preparation β
d) Waste management
Explanation: These prevent contamination during sterile compounding. - Drug utilization review (DUR) is done to:
a) Promote expensive brands
b) Evaluate drug prescribing practices β
c) Sell more drugs
d) Reduce therapy
Explanation: DUR ensures appropriate, safe, and cost-effective use of medications.