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100+ Free Paramedicine Board of Australia MCQ Practice Questions

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Sample Paramedicine Board of Australia MCQ Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your Paramedicine Board of Australia MCQ exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1A patient at an emergency scene appears intoxicated, is agitated, and verbally tells the responding paramedic crew to leave without receiving care. The patient has not been assessed for decision-making capacity. Which statement best reflects the paramedic's professional and ethical obligation?
A.The crew must leave immediately because the patient has verbally refused care
B.The crew has a duty of care to further assess the patient before accepting a refusal of treatment
C.Duty of care only applies if the patient personally called the ambulance
D.Because the patient is behaving aggressively, the crew can assume he has decision-making capacity
Explanation: A valid refusal of treatment requires the patient to have decision-making capacity at the time of refusal. Voluntary intoxication, agitation and altered behaviour can impair capacity, so paramedics have an ongoing duty of care to assess capacity (and safety) before accepting the refusal as valid.
2When assessing whether a patient has the decision-making capacity to refuse paramedic treatment, which of the following is NOT one of the generally recognised components of that assessment?
A.Understanding the information relevant to the decision
B.Retaining that information long enough to use it
C.Having a formal medical diagnosis that explains the refusal
D.Weighing the information to arrive at a decision and communicating that decision
Explanation: Capacity assessment focuses on functional ability - understanding, retaining, weighing/using information, and communicating a decision - not on whether the person has a diagnosed medical condition. A patient can have capacity despite having a diagnosis, or lack capacity without one.
3For consent to paramedic treatment to be valid, it must be given voluntarily by a patient with capacity who has been given adequate information, and it must also:
A.Cover the specific treatment being proposed
B.Be provided in writing before any care begins
C.Be witnessed by a second paramedic
D.Be confirmed by a family member
Explanation: Valid consent must relate specifically to the treatment being proposed; consenting to one intervention does not imply consent to unrelated procedures. Consent in the out-of-hospital setting is typically verbal or implied by cooperative behaviour, not a formal written or witnessed process.
4A paramedic is asked by a treating hospital clinician for information gathered during a call, to support ongoing care of the same patient. Sharing this clinical information without a separate specific consent form is:
A.A breach of confidentiality in every circumstance
B.Generally appropriate, because it supports direct clinical care of the same patient
C.Only permitted if police are also present
D.Only permitted if the patient is unconscious
Explanation: Confidentiality obligations permit sharing relevant clinical information with other treating health practitioners for the purpose of direct patient care; this is a recognised exception to strict confidentiality, distinct from disclosure to unrelated third parties.
5Under the National Law, which of the following is one of the four categories of 'notifiable conduct' that triggers a mandatory notification obligation for a registered paramedic who becomes aware of it in a colleague?
A.Disagreeing with a colleague's clinical decision
B.Practising while intoxicated by drugs or alcohol
C.Taking annual leave without adequate notice
D.Working for more than one ambulance service
Explanation: The four recognised categories of notifiable conduct under the National Law are: practising while intoxicated by drugs or alcohol, sexual misconduct connected to practice, an impairment that places the public at risk of harm, and a significant departure from accepted professional standards.
6Which of the following statements about notifications to Ahpra is correct?
A.Only employers can make a voluntary notification about a health practitioner
B.Any person, including a member of the public, can make a voluntary notification
C.Voluntary notifications can only concern administrative matters, not clinical conduct
D.A mandatory notification can only be made by another paramedic
Explanation: A voluntary notification about a registered health practitioner's conduct, performance or health can be made by anyone, including patients, family members or members of the public. Mandatory notifications, by contrast, are legal obligations that fall on registered practitioners and employers who form a reasonable belief that notifiable conduct has occurred.
7The shared Code of Conduct that applies to Ahpra-registered paramedics states that its first principle is to 'put patients first' through:
A.Safe, effective and collaborative practice informed by the best available evidence
B.Prioritising the paramedic's own operational efficiency
C.Following instructions from bystanders at the scene
D.Minimising documentation to save time
Explanation: Principle 1 of the shared Code of Conduct calls on practitioners to practise safely, effectively and in partnership with patients and colleagues, using patient-centred approaches informed by the best available evidence, to achieve the best possible outcomes.
8The Code of Conduct principle addressing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and cultural safety asks practitioners to:
A.Treat all patients identically regardless of cultural background
B.Foster open, honest and culturally safe professional relationships that consider the specific health and cultural safety needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
C.Refer all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander patients to a specialist service
D.Rely on family members to interpret cultural needs on the patient's behalf
Explanation: This Code of Conduct principle specifically directs practitioners to consider the particular health and cultural safety needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples and to build open, honest, culturally safe professional relationships, rather than applying a one-size-fits-all approach.
9A paramedic who regularly treats patients in a small rural community is offered a significant personal gift by a former patient's family in gratitude for care provided. The most appropriate action, consistent with maintaining professional boundaries, is to:
A.Accept the gift privately to avoid causing offence
B.Decline or redirect the gift in line with the employer's policy on gifts and professional boundaries
C.Accept the gift and share it with the rest of the crew
D.Ask the family to instead make a larger donation directly to the paramedic
Explanation: Maintaining professional boundaries means managing gifts transparently and in line with organisational policy, which typically requires declining, redirecting, or formally recording significant gifts to avoid conflicts of interest or the appearance of impropriety.
10Completing an accurate and timely patient care record after every case primarily supports which professional and ethical obligation?
A.Assuming responsibility and accepting accountability for professional decisions
B.Reducing the paramedic's total rostered hours
C.Avoiding the need for clinical handover
D.Replacing the need for direct patient consent
Explanation: Contemporaneous, accurate documentation is central evidence of the clinical reasoning and decisions made during a case, directly supporting the professional obligation to be accountable for one's professional decisions.

About the Paramedicine Board of Australia MCQ Exam

The Paramedicine Board of Australia's written MCQ examination is the knowledge-based component of the Paramedicine Competency Assessment, sat by internationally qualified paramedics whose overseas qualification is assessed as 'relevant' under the section 53(c) pathway (or who are directed to sit it for recency of practice). It assesses knowledge and the application of knowledge across the five Professional Capabilities for Registered Paramedics domains: professional and ethical practice, communication and collaboration, evidence-based practice, safety and risk management, and paramedicine practice.

Assessment

The written MCQ is one of three components of the single-day Paramedicine Competency Assessment for internationally qualified paramedics, alongside 5 OSCE stations and 2 clinical scenarios. It has up to 60 multiple-choice questions, some case-based and some multi-step, and assesses knowledge and its application across the five Professional Capabilities for Registered Paramedics domains. Delivered at Ahpra-contracted assessment centres (Edith Cowan University, WA, or University of the Sunshine Coast, QLD).

Time Limit

60 minutes for the written MCQ component.

Passing Score

No fixed public percentage is disclosed. Ahpra reports 'Competent' or 'Not Competent' per component rather than a numeric score.

Exam Fee

A$3,500 for the full assessment (written MCQ + OSCEs + scenarios, one sitting). Resit of a failed component: A$1,000. Appeal: A$750. A separate A$417 Qualifications Assessment fee applies earlier in the registration pathway. Confirm the current schedule on the Board's registration fees page. (Ahpra, on behalf of the Paramedicine Board of Australia)

Paramedicine Board of Australia MCQ Exam Content Outline

Not published

The Professional and Ethical Practitioner

Professional conduct, accountability, consent, privacy, boundaries and legal responsibilities.

Not published

The Communicator and Collaborator

Culturally safe communication and collaboration with patients, families, colleagues and other health practitioners.

Not published

The Evidence-Based Practitioner

Evidence use, clinical reasoning, reflection and continuing professional development.

Not published

The Safety and Risk Management Practitioner

Safety, clinical risk, infection prevention, quality improvement and safe care.

Not published

The Paramedicine Practitioner

Paramedicine knowledge, assessment, clinical decision-making and treatment skills.

How to Pass the Paramedicine Board of Australia MCQ Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: No fixed public percentage is disclosed. Ahpra reports 'Competent' or 'Not Competent' per component rather than a numeric score.
  • Assessment: The written MCQ is one of three components of the single-day Paramedicine Competency Assessment for internationally qualified paramedics, alongside 5 OSCE stations and 2 clinical scenarios. It has up to 60 multiple-choice questions, some case-based and some multi-step, and assesses knowledge and its application across the five Professional Capabilities for Registered Paramedics domains. Delivered at Ahpra-contracted assessment centres (Edith Cowan University, WA, or University of the Sunshine Coast, QLD).
  • Time limit: 60 minutes for the written MCQ component.
  • Exam fee: A$3,500 for the full assessment (written MCQ + OSCEs + scenarios, one sitting). Resit of a failed component: A$1,000. Appeal: A$750. A separate A$417 Qualifications Assessment fee applies earlier in the registration pathway. Confirm the current schedule on the Board's registration fees page.

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

Paramedicine Board of Australia MCQ Study Tips from Top Performers

1Study the Professional Capabilities for Registered Paramedics document domain by domain. Ahpra states that the written MCQ assesses knowledge and its application across all five domains, but does not publish domain weightings.
2Work through the example written examination questions in Ahpra's Paramedicine Competency Assessment Candidate Handbook to understand real item style, including case-based and multi-step sequencing questions.
3Since the written exam is one part of a same-day assessment with OSCEs and scenarios, revise primary-survey (ABCDE) sequencing and clinical-guideline application alongside knowledge recall, not just definitions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Paramedicine Board of Australia MCQ exam?

It is the written knowledge component of the Paramedicine Competency Assessment — a single assessment day for internationally qualified paramedics that also includes 5 OSCE stations and 2 clinical scenarios. The written exam has up to 60 multiple-choice questions in 60 minutes, mapped to the Professional Capabilities for Registered Paramedics.

Who has to sit this exam?

Internationally qualified paramedics whose overseas qualification is assessed by Ahpra as 'relevant' (not substantially equivalent) under the section 53(c) pathway, or paramedics directed by the Board to sit it to meet recency-of-practice requirements.

How much does the assessment cost?

The full Competency Assessment (written MCQ, OSCEs, and scenarios in one sitting) is A$3,500. Resitting a single failed component costs A$1,000, and an appeal costs A$750. Check the Paramedicine Board's registration fees page for the current schedule.

What score do I need to pass the written exam?

Ahpra does not publish a numeric pass percentage for the written component. Results are reported as 'Competent' or 'Not Competent' for each of the three assessment components.

What topics are covered?

The written exam assesses knowledge and its application across the five Professional Capabilities for Registered Paramedics domains: professional and ethical practice, communication and collaboration, evidence-based practice, safety and risk management, and paramedicine practice. Ahpra does not publish a domain-weighted MCQ blueprint.