The Medical-Surgical Nursing Certification Board (MSNCB) tests your ability to assign tasks safely to LPNs and UAPs. Delegation falls under the Nursing Teamwork and Collaboration domain, which accounts for 26 of your 125 scored items. Prepare for these clinical scenarios using our CMSRN practice test bank of 4100+ questions.
Question 1
49 of 125. An LPN with wound care certification reports increased drainage from a diabetic patient's foot ulcer. The nurse delegates wound assessment but notes the LPN has never managed osteomyelitis cases. Which action violates the Right Person principle?
- A) A) Observing the LPN perform the assessment to evaluate technique
- B) B) Assigning the task to an RN specializing in wound management
- C) C) Having the LPN document findings while the nurse assesses
- D) D) Allowing the LPN to irrigate the wound but not stage it✓
Show rationale
D breaches Right Person by assigning staging (complex judgment) to an LPN lacking osteomyelitis experience. A provides supervision appropriate for skill level. B/C adjust delegation appropriately; RNs manage complex complications. The osteomyelitis cue requires advanced assessment beyond basic certification.
Question 2
123 of 125. An experienced UAP asks if they can apply a prescribed hydrocortisone cream to a patient’s stage 2 pressure injury. The patient has no allergies and stable vital signs. How should the RN respond?
- A) A) Supervise the UAP while they cleanse and apply the cream
- B) B) Delegate after verifying correct patient and medication
- C) C) Decline as wound care requires licensed assessment✓
- D) D) Instruct to apply only barrier cream, not medication
Show rationale
Medication application to broken skin requires assessment of wound characteristics and evaluation of healing, which are licensed nursing functions. While UAPs may apply creams to intact skin, stage 2 pressure injuries involve partial-thickness loss (discriminating cue) needing RN evaluation. Option A risks improper assessment of wound status. Option B ignores medication absorption risks. Option D misrepresents the prescription. State boards consistently prohibit UAPs from performing wound treatments involving judgment.
Question 3
55 of 125. An experienced LPN administers scheduled insulin to a NPO patient before surgery despite a "hold insulin" order. Which feedback focuses on system improvement?
- A) A) Review medication verification steps and surgical hold protocols together✓
- B) B) Request the LPN complete an incident report for process analysis
- C) C) Role-play scenarios where orders conflict with routine practices
- D) D) Supervise the LPN's next three insulin administrations
Show rationale
Jointly reviewing protocols addresses both the specific error (overlooking the hold order) and system factors like verification processes. Option B shifts responsibility for system analysis away from collaborative learning. Option C uses simulation but doesn't address current policy gaps. Option D focuses on oversight rather than understanding. CMSRN standards emphasize analyzing delegation breakdowns to improve systems, not just individual performance (QSEN Competencies, 2023).
Question 4
93 of 125. During a staffing shortage, an RN must delegate tasks for four stable patients requiring wound care, vital signs, and meal assistance. Which assignment maximizes cost-efficient care?
- A) A) Delegate all wound care to UAP while RN focuses on assessments
- B) B) Assign vital signs and meal assistance to UAP with RN performing wound care✓
- C) C) Have UAP handle meal assistance only to minimize delegation risks
- D) D) Delegate wound care and vital signs to UAP under RN supervision
Show rationale
UAPs can safely perform vital signs and meal assistance per scope, allowing RN to focus on skilled wound assessments. Option A risks improper wound care by UAPs. Option C underutilizes UAPs, increasing RN workload and costs. Option D exceeds UAP scope for wound care. Discriminators: stable patients allow safe delegation, but wound care requires RN clinical judgment. Cost containment relies on matching tasks to appropriate staff levels per state nurse practice acts.
Question 5
35 of 125. A nurse delegates vital sign monitoring to a UAP for a patient with heart failure who received IV diuretics 30 minutes ago. The UAP reports BP 88/50 and HR 118. Which nurse response reflects the Right Evaluation?
- A) A) \Recheck the vital signs in one hour and report any further changes.\
- B) B) \Assess urine output and skin turgor while I prepare IV fluids.\✓
- C) C) \Document the findings and continue monitoring every 15 minutes.\
- D) D) \Administer 500 mL saline bolus per the hypotension protocol.\
Show rationale
B demonstrates evaluation through focused assessment of dehydration signs post-diuretic. A delays intervention for symptomatic hypotension. C prioritizes documentation over clinical action. D involves an unlicensed task (IV administration). The diuretic timing and vital signs cue fluid status evaluation per heart failure protocols.
Question 6
92 of 125. An RN coordinates discharge for an elderly patient with heart failure, osteoarthritis, and limited finances. The patient requires daily weight monitoring and medication teaching. Which strategy best contains costs while preventing readmission?
- A) A) Schedule daily home health RN visits for weight checks and teaching
- B) B) Teach family to perform weights and provide written medication guides✓
- C) C) Extend hospitalization for additional teaching sessions
- D) D) Arrange weekly clinic visits for weight assessment and education
Show rationale
Family involvement leverages existing support systems, reducing costly professional services. Option A overutilizes home health for tasks teachable to family. Option C increases hospitalization costs unnecessarily for stable teaching. Option D incurs repeated clinic visit expenses. Discriminators: chronic conditions require sustainable low-cost monitoring, and limited finances necessitate resource-conscious solutions. CMSRN guidelines emphasize empowering caregivers for routine tasks to reduce readmissions while containing costs.
Question 7
71 of 125. A UAP cares for a fall-risk patient on diuretics. Which action requires immediate nurse follow-up?
- A) A) Places nonslip footwear on the patient during ambulation.
- B) B) Leaves the bed elevated to assist with patient transfers.✓
- C) C) Ensures the call light is within the patient's reach.
- D) D) Encourages slow position changes before standing.
Show rationale
An elevated bed increases fall risk; beds must be lowered when unattended. Nonslip footwear (A), call light access (C), and position change coaching (D) are correct UAP actions for fall prevention. The diuretic use (urgency, dizziness) and fall history heighten risk, making bed elevation unsafe. Options A, C, and D align with safety standards and do not need correction.
Question 8
22 of 125. A medical-surgical nurse cares for a stable patient with heart failure who requires ambulation assistance, vital signs monitoring every 4 hours, and daily weight measurement. The patient has mild dementia but follows one-step commands. Which task is appropriate to delegate to unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP)?
- A) A) Ambulating the patient to the bathroom with a walker✓
- B) B) Assessing lung sounds after ambulation
- C) C) Evaluating the patient's pedal edema post-ambulation
- D) D) Adjusting the oxygen flow rate based on pulse oximetry
Show rationale
Ambulation assistance is within UAP scope for stable patients with clear instructions, as per delegation principles. The patient’s ability to follow commands minimizes safety risks. Assessing lung sounds (B) requires clinical judgment for heart failure and is an RN responsibility. Evaluating edema (C) involves assessment beyond UAP scope. Oxygen adjustments (D) require clinical decision-making and licensure. Delegation must match staff competency and patient stability cues.
Question 9
109 of 125. A nurse manager on a medical-surgical unit notices consistent overstocking of wound care supplies, leading to expired products. The unit uses vacuum-assisted closure devices for 40% of patients. Which strategy best addresses fiscal waste while maintaining clinical readiness?
- A) A) Reduce par levels for all wound supplies by 50% and order weekly instead of monthly
- B) B) Implement usage tracking for high-cost items and adjust inventory based on treatment trends✓
- C) C) Centralize all wound care supplies under charge nurse control to restrict access
- D) D) Donate expired supplies to outpatient clinics to recoup financial losses
Show rationale
Tracking usage aligns inventory with actual clinical demand (discriminating cue: vacuum devices used for 40% of patients), preventing overstocking. Option A risks shortages during surges. Option C creates care delays without addressing ordering practices. Option D violates infection control standards for expired supplies. Fiscal efficiency requires data-driven adjustments per ANA standards, not arbitrary cuts or redistribution of compromised materials.
Question 10
44 of 125. An experienced nurse hesitates to delegate ambulation of a post-hip-replacement patient with osteoporosis to a physical therapy aide. The aide is trained in gait training, but the patient reported dizziness yesterday. What primarily underlies this delegation barrier?
- A) A) Inadequate assessment of the patient's current dizziness resolution status
- B) B) The aide's lack of certification in orthopedic mobility protocols
- C) C) Overestimation of patient risk due to the osteoporosis comorbidity✓
- D) D) Unfamiliarity with the facility's delegation policies for rehab tasks
Show rationale
The nurse's hesitation stems from overemphasizing osteoporosis as a risk factor despite the aide's gait training competency, indicating risk misjudgment. Option A is incorrect; dizziness resolution isn't mentioned, so assessment isn't the barrier. Option B contradicts cues; aides don't require orthopedic certifications for standard ambulation. Option D is implausible; experienced nurses know delegation policies. Delegation should match delegate competency to patient needs, avoiding unnecessary task retention per CMSRN standards.
Question 11
104 of 125. A diabetic patient with a new foot ulcer requires daily dressing changes and diabetic education. The RN has 30 minutes available before shift end. Which approach optimizes cost-effective care?
- A) A) Complete dressing change now and defer teaching to next shift
- B) B) Delegate dressing change to UAP while providing education✓
- C) C) Perform both tasks rapidly to avoid overtime costs
- D) D) Request wound care nurse consultation for efficiency
Show rationale
Delegating routine dressing changes to UAP frees RN time for high-value education, preventing future complications. Option A delays critical self-management teaching. Option C risks errors from rushing. Option D incurs unnecessary consultation costs. Discriminators: foot ulcers require timely education to prevent deterioration; UAPs can perform simple dressings under supervision. CMSRN protocols prioritize delegation to maximize RN role in patient education for cost containment.
Question 12
8 of 125. A nurse delegates to a UAP for a patient with heart failure who gained 2 kg in 24 hours and has 3+ edema. The patient is on fluid restriction. Which task is appropriate for the UAP?
- A) A) Reweigh the patient using standardized techniques and report findings.✓
- B) B) Educate the patient about strict fluid and sodium restrictions.
- C) C) Assess lung sounds for worsening crackles or congestion.
- D) D) Administer the prescribed IV furosemide immediately.
Show rationale
UAPs can accurately measure weight and report changes, which is within their scope. Educating (B), assessing lung sounds (C), and administering IV diuretics (D) require RN clinical judgment. The acute weight gain and edema signal decompensation, but initial confirmation via weight is delegable. Options B-D involve assessment, teaching, or medication skills beyond UAP responsibilities despite the patient's fluid restriction and edema cues.
Question 13
60 of 125. A charge nurse delegates narcotic count to an LPN with a suspended nursing license in another state. The LPN completes the count correctly. Which legal principle is violated?
- A) A) State Nurse Practice Act restrictions on delegation✓
- B) B) Joint Commission medication management standards
- C) C) Scope of practice for temporarily licensed staff
- D) D) Institutional policy on controlled substance procedures
Show rationale
Nurse Practice Acts prohibit delegating to individuals with restricted/suspended licenses. Option A directly addresses this statutory violation. Option B/C/D are secondary—even with correct procedure (D) or temporary licensure (C), the delegatee's invalid credentials create liability. The RN must verify current, unrestricted licensure before delegation. Distractors describe procedural elements that don't override fundamental legal barriers.
Question 14
46 of 125. A postoperative patient needs heparin injections. The unit has prefilled syringes ($1.80/dose) and vials requiring nurse-drawn doses ($0.30/dose). The nurse has 12 high-acuity patients. Which method optimizes fiscal and clinical efficiency?
- A) A) Use prefilled syringes exclusively to minimize preparation errors✓
- B) B) Draw all doses from vials at shift start to reduce hourly costs
- C) C) Alternate between methods based on immediate time constraints
- D) D) Prefill syringes from vials during low-acuity periods
Show rationale
High patient acuity increases error risks with vial draws (discriminating cue: 12 high-acuity patients). Prefilled syringes enhance safety despite higher cost, aligning with Joint Commission med safety goals. Option B risks dosage inaccuracies and contamination. Options C/D create inconsistent practices. Safety justifies added expense when cognitive load threatens precision.
Question 15
17 of 125. During a supply shortage, a nurse must choose between single-use saline vials or bulk irrigation bags for wound care. The patient has a penicillin allergy. Which choice balances cost-effectiveness and safety?
- A) A) Use bulk bags after verifying no latex or additive contaminants✓
- B) B) Select single-use vials to guarantee sterility and allergen control
- C) C) Dilute tap water for irrigation to conserve medical-grade supplies
- D) D) Delegate supply selection to pharmacy to avoid liability risks
Show rationale
Bulk bags reduce cost and waste versus single-use vials when contamination risks are mitigated (discriminating cues: shortage context + allergy). Verification ensures safety per FDA guidelines. Option B ignores fiscal efficiency during shortages. Option C violates infection prevention standards. Option D abdicates nursing judgment. Resource stewardship requires verifying appropriate substitutions.