Skip to contentMCQ on Ethics in Pharmacy Practice
π’ Easy Level (1β20)
- Which principle emphasizes doing good in pharmacy practice?
A. Autonomy
B. Beneficence β
C. Non-maleficence
D. Fidelity
Explanation: Beneficence promotes actions that benefit patients. - Which principle means βdo no harmβ?
A. Justice
B. Non-maleficence β
C. Veracity
D. Confidentiality
Explanation: Non-maleficence ensures no intentional harm is caused. - The principle of autonomy allows patients to:
A. Demand free medication
B. Refuse treatment β
C. Prescribe drugs
D. Change laws
Explanation: Autonomy supports informed decisions by patients. - Confidentiality in pharmacy involves:
A. Sharing patient info with friends
B. Keeping patient information private β
C. Selling data
D. Giving drug samples
Explanation: Patient privacy is a key ethical obligation. - The Code of Ethics for pharmacists is established by:
A. MCI
B. FSSAI
C. PCI β
D. ICMR
Explanation: Pharmacy Council of India develops ethical codes. - A pharmacist should always:
A. Sell costly drugs
B. Act in the patientβs best interest β
C. Follow patient orders
D. Promote brand drugs only
Explanation: Patient welfare is the central ethical concern. - Which of the following is an unethical practice?
A. Patient counseling
B. Maintaining records
C. Misbranding drugs β
D. Drug inventory
Explanation: Misbranding is legally and ethically wrong. - Fidelity in ethics means:
A. Lying to protect a patient
B. Being loyal and keeping promises β
C. Making profits
D. Withholding prescriptions
Explanation: Fidelity is about trustworthiness and duty. - Which principle ensures fairness in healthcare delivery?
A. Justice β
B. Autonomy
C. Beneficence
D. Fidelity
Explanation: Justice demands equitable treatment. - Unethical drug promotion includes:
A. Providing leaflets
B. Offering gifts to doctors β
C. Drug sampling
D. Training pharmacists
Explanation: Offering gifts compromises impartiality. - Patient counseling by pharmacists is an example of:
A. Law enforcement
B. Ethical and legal duty β
C. Social media marketing
D. Price control
Explanation: It’s an ethical and professional responsibility. - Whistleblowing involves:
A. Hiding medication errors
B. Reporting unethical practices β
C. Selling banned drugs
D. Breaking confidentiality
Explanation: Whistleblowing reports wrongdoing in healthcare. - Veracity in ethics means:
A. Lying to patients
B. Telling the truth β
C. Manipulating results
D. Ignoring complaints
Explanation: Veracity emphasizes honesty. - The ethical duty of a pharmacist includes:
A. Inflating drug prices
B. Misleading patients
C. Preventing medication errors β
D. Promoting personal beliefs
Explanation: Reducing errors is crucial to ethics and safety. - Ethical issues in pharmacy often arise due to:
A. Product expiry
B. Drug stability
C. Conflict of interest β
D. Equipment failure
Explanation: Personal gain can conflict with patient care. - Unethical dispensing includes:
A. Providing OTC meds
B. Issuing drugs without prescription β
C. Guiding on drug use
D. Explaining side effects
Explanation: Prescription drugs must not be given without authorization. - Which of these is an ethical responsibility of pharmacists?
A. Ignoring ADRs
B. Reporting adverse effects β
C. Overpricing drugs
D. Refusing poor patients
Explanation: Pharmacists must monitor and report drug safety. - Ethical principles guide:
A. Profit margins
B. Patient interactions β
C. Manufacturer incentives
D. Pharma marketing
Explanation: Ethics governs professional behavior with patients. - Which document outlines a pharmacist’s ethical duties?
A. Patient Charter
B. Pharmacist Code of Ethics β
C. Drug Manual
D. Narcotic Control Guidelines
Explanation: The Code provides ethical practice guidelines. - Deception in pharmacy is a violation of:
A. Veracity β
B. Justice
C. Fidelity
D. Beneficence
Explanation: Deception contradicts the principle of honesty.
π‘ Moderate Level (21β40)
- Ethical dilemmas in pharmacy often involve:
A. Packaging issues
B. Profit vs patient welfare β
C. Branding
D. Storage
Explanation: Conflicts arise between financial and ethical priorities. - Pharmacists should report unethical behavior to:
A. The media
B. Regulatory authority β
C. Competitors
D. Patients
Explanation: Responsible reporting is essential for accountability. - Marketing unapproved drugs is considered:
A. Legal
B. Ethical
C. Unethical and illegal β
D. A common practice
Explanation: Promoting unapproved drugs is a violation. - Refusing service based on race or gender violates:
A. Autonomy
B. Veracity
C. Justice β
D. Non-maleficence
Explanation: It denies fair treatment. - If a pharmacist dispenses expired drugs, it breaches:
A. Safety standards
B. Ethical conduct β
C. Inventory control
D. Cost-saving measures
Explanation: It’s harmful and unethical. - Informed consent is primarily associated with:
A. Confidentiality
B. Autonomy β
C. Justice
D. Non-maleficence
Explanation: It respects the patient’s decision-making rights. - Ethical decision-making in pharmacy includes:
A. Selling more units
B. Evaluating patient outcomes β
C. Avoiding communication
D. Withholding information
Explanation: Ethical choices improve patient care. - Accepting bribes for product endorsement is a breach of:
A. Justice
B. Fidelity
C. Professional ethics β
D. Legal codes only
Explanation: Bribery compromises impartial care. - A pharmacist notices a prescribing error. They should:
A. Ignore it
B. Inform the prescriber β
C. Dispense it anyway
D. Change the drug
Explanation: Ethical duty is to prevent harm. - Corporate pressure to meet sales targets may lead to:
A. Ethical growth
B. Rational use
C. Ethical compromise β
D. Better counseling
Explanation: Sales pressure may influence unethical behavior. - Ethical pharmacy practice includes:
A. Delayed service
B. Patient-centered care β
C. Prioritizing profit
D. Discouraging generics
Explanation: The patientβs needs come first. - Code of ethics promotes:
A. Sales
B. Ethical awareness β
C. Market analysis
D. Pharmacovigilance
Explanation: It guides moral behavior in practice. - Recommending unnecessary medication violates:
A. Autonomy
B. Justice
C. Beneficence β
D. Confidentiality
Explanation: It is not in the patientβs best interest. - Ignoring patient complaints breaches:
A. Veracity
B. Autonomy
C. Fidelity β
D. Confidentiality
Explanation: Loyalty includes listening and acting on concerns. - Selling medication with manipulated expiry dates is:
A. Quality control
B. Fraud and unethical β
C. Inventory management
D. Data error
Explanation: It’s a serious breach of ethics and law. - Ethics in pharmacy are essential for:
A. Inventory
B. Cost control
C. Professional integrity β
D. Product branding
Explanation: Ethical practice builds trust and reputation. - Inappropriate advertisement of drugs can lead to:
A. More patients
B. Legal and ethical violations β
C. Free promotions
D. Safety improvement
Explanation: Misleading ads are unethical. - A conflict of interest arises when:
A. Patient care is unbiased
B. Decisions are influenced by personal gain β
C. Ethical guidelines are followed
D. Counseling is performed
Explanation: Ethics requires impartiality. - Ethical pharmacy practice requires commitment to:
A. Sales targets
B. Patient advocacy β
C. Inventory audits
D. Manufacturer demands
Explanation: Pharmacists must act in the patientβs best interest. - Manipulating clinical data for drug approval is:
A. Innovation
B. Professionalism
C. Unethical and fraudulent β
D. Regulatory requirement
Explanation: Data manipulation undermines safety and trust.
π΄ Hard Level (41β50)
- A pharmacist discloses a patient’s condition to an unauthorized person. This violates:
A. Autonomy
B. Confidentiality β
C. Justice
D. Fidelity
Explanation: Patient data must remain private. - Pharmacists refusing emergency contraception due to personal beliefs raises:
A. Legal concerns
B. Ethical debate on autonomy β
C. Compliance issues
D. Economic disparity
Explanation: It may conflict with patient autonomy. - Using patient data for marketing is a breach of:
A. Professional etiquette
B. Confidentiality β
C. Product license
D. Justice
Explanation: Consent is needed for data usage. - Ethical dilemma in pharmacy arises when:
A. A rule is broken
B. Two ethical principles conflict β
C. Inventory is full
D. Law changes
Explanation: Ethical dilemmas involve competing values. - Prescribing by pharmacists without authority is:
A. Ethical
B. Common
C. Illegal and unethical β
D. Promoted
Explanation: Only licensed prescribers may prescribe. - Ethical drug promotion must avoid:
A. Educational materials
B. Deceptive claims β
C. Patient leaflets
D. Package inserts
Explanation: Misleading claims are unethical. - Pharmacists’ responsibility in clinical trials includes:
A. Selling drugs
B. Managing subjects
C. Ensuring ethical drug dispensing β
D. Pricing
Explanation: They ensure proper storage, dispensing, and records. - Withholding cheaper alternatives violates:
A. Justice and beneficence β
B. Confidentiality
C. Non-maleficence
D. Fidelity
Explanation: Patients deserve access to affordable options. - Ethics requires pharmacists to:
A. Promote sponsor products
B. Act in favor of pharma companies
C. Avoid bias and serve patients β
D. Focus on business
Explanation: Ethical practice centers on unbiased care. - Which principle is most challenged by marketing incentives?
A. Autonomy
B. Beneficence
C. Non-maleficence
D. Fidelity β
Explanation: Incentives can compromise loyalty to patients.