This is the content of the pop-over!

NHA CPCTA (CPCT) Practice Tests & Test Prep by Exam Edge


NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant  product image
(4.6)
Based on 25 Reviews

  • Real Exam Simulation: Timed questions and matching content build comfort for your NHA CPCTA test day.
  • Instant, 24/7 Access: Web-based NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant practice exams with no software needed.
  • Clear Explanations: Step-by-step answers and explanations for your NHA exam to strengthen understanding.
  • Boosted Confidence: Reduces anxiety and improves test-taking skills to ace your NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant (CPCT).

Featured on

NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Online Practice Test Bundles

BEST VALUE
10 practice tests

$99.50

$399.50

SAVE $300

Only $9.95 per test!

  • 100% Pass Guarantee
  • 10 online practice tests
  • 100 questions per test
  • Bonus: 100 Flash Cards + Study Guide
  • Instant access
  • Detailed Explanations
  • Practice tests never expire
  • Timed, untimed, or study guide mode
5 practice tests

$69.75

$199.75

SAVE $130

Only $13.95 per test!

  • 5 online practice tests
  • 100 questions per test
  • Bonus: 100 Flash Cards + Study Guide
  • Instant access
  • Detailed Explanations
  • Practice tests never expire
  • Timed, untimed, or study guide mode
1 practice test

$39.95

  • 1 online practice test
  • 100 questions per test
  • Instant access
  • Detailed Explanations
  • Practice tests never expire
  • Timed, untimed, or study guide mode
Quick Select
Tap to choose a bundle

** All Prices are in US Dollars (USD) **


NHA CPCTA (CPCT) Resources

Jump to the section you need most.

Understanding the exact breakdown of the NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant test will help you know what to expect and how to most effectively prepare. The NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant has multiple-choice questions . The exam will be broken down into the sections below:

NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Exam Blueprint
Domain Name % Number of
Questions
Patient Care  
     General Patient Care 38% 38
     Patient Care and Preparation Related to Phlebotomy and EKG 10% 10
Safety 10% 10
Professional Responsibilities 5% 5
Infection Control 4% 4
Phlebotomy  
     Primary Collections 15% 15
     Special Collections 3% 3
     Processing 5% 5
EKG Monitoring 10% 10

NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Study Tips by Domain

  • Verify patient identity with at least two identifiers (e.g., name and DOB) before any care; red flag: relying on room number or family confirmation alone.
  • Perform focused assessments (pain, LOC, skin, breath sounds as indicated) and report abnormalities promptly; priority rule: new chest pain, acute SOB, or sudden confusion is an immediate escalation.
  • Measure and document vital signs accurately with correct cuff size and technique; common trap: using the wrong BP cuff (too small falsely elevates readings).
  • Assist with ADLs while promoting independence and dignity; contraindication: do not ambulate a patient who is dizzy, orthostatic, or newly post-procedure without clearance.
  • Maintain skin integrity with repositioning, moisture control, and pressure injury prevention; threshold cue: turn/reposition at least every 2 hours unless a different order is in place.
  • Use clear, therapeutic communication and timely documentation (what you did, what you observed, and when); red flag: charting before care is provided or documenting opinions instead of objective findings.
  • Verify patient identity using at least two identifiers (e.g., full name and DOB) before any care task; red flag: relying on room number, bed tag, or a family member’s confirmation.
  • Measure and document vital signs accurately (including pain score when applicable) and report immediately when values are outside facility parameters; common trap: rechecking abnormal readings without notifying the nurse.
  • Assist with activities of daily living (bathing, grooming, toileting, feeding) while preserving dignity and privacy; priority rule: keep the patient covered and explain each step before touching.
  • Use safe patient transfers and mobility support (gait belt, proper body mechanics, call for help when needed); red flag: attempting a one-person transfer for an unsteady or post-op patient.
  • Maintain accurate intake and output (I&O) and recognize signs of dehydration or fluid overload; common trap: forgetting to record emesis, tube feed flushes, or unmeasured voids.
  • Provide basic comfort and support (positioning, skin checks, pressure injury prevention) and document any new redness or breakdown promptly; priority rule: reposition immobile patients at least q2h per protocol.
  • Use Standard Precautions for every patient and add transmission-based precautions when indicated; red flag: entering a room with isolation signage without confirming required PPE and hand hygiene steps.
  • Perform a quick fall-risk check (e.g., gait, dizziness, tubes/lines, prior falls) before ambulation and keep the bed low with the call light in reach; common trap: leaving a patient unattended in the bathroom.
  • Apply safe patient handling—use gait belts, lift devices, and team assists per policy; priority rule: if the load is unsafe for one person, stop and get help rather than “trying once.”
  • Prevent sharps and bloodborne exposure by activating safety devices immediately and never recapping needles; red flag: a sharps container that is over ¾ full—replace it before it becomes a hazard.
  • Maintain environmental safety by cleaning spills promptly, removing clutter, and securing cords/oxygen tubing; common trap: mopping without placing wet-floor signage and restricting foot traffic.
  • Follow medication and oxygen safety boundaries for PCTAs—verify patient ID and report concerns but do not administer meds unless explicitly authorized; red flag: changing oxygen flow rate without an order or outside facility protocol.
  • Verify patient identity using at least two identifiers (e.g., full name and DOB) before any task; red flag: relying on room number or a family member’s confirmation.
  • Maintain confidentiality (HIPAA) and share information only with authorized staff on a need-to-know basis; common trap: discussing patient details in hallways, elevators, or on social media.
  • Use proper chain of command and scope of practice—perform only tasks you are trained and authorized to do; priority rule: when unsure, stop and ask the nurse/supervisor before proceeding.
  • Document promptly, accurately, and objectively (what you saw/did and patient response) without opinions; red flag: charting ahead of care or using vague terms like “normal” without specifics.
  • Communicate changes in patient condition immediately using clear, concise reporting (e.g., SBAR); priority rule: acute symptoms (new chest pain, SOB, sudden confusion) require rapid escalation, not routine charting first.
  • Demonstrate professional behavior and boundaries (respect, cultural sensitivity, and appropriate touch) while obtaining consent/assent for care; contraindication: providing medical advice or accepting gifts that could influence care.
  • Perform hand hygiene at the right moments (before/after patient contact, after glove removal, after contact with bodily fluids)—red flag: relying on gloves instead of washing/sanitizing.
  • Use PPE based on anticipated exposure (gloves, gown, mask/eye protection) and remove it in the correct order—common trap: touching the front of the mask/face shield during doffing.
  • Apply Standard Precautions for every patient and add Transmission-Based Precautions when indicated—priority rule: place a surgical mask on a coughing patient during transport.
  • Follow sharps safety every time (never recap unless policy requires a one-hand technique; dispose immediately in an approved container)—threshold: replace sharps container before it reaches the fill line (about 2/3–3/4 full).
  • Clean and disinfect equipment between patients using the correct product and contact time—red flag: wiping a surface dry before the disinfectant’s required wet time is met.
  • Handle biohazard waste and linens properly (bag at point of use, keep away from your uniform, label as required)—common trap: shaking soiled linens, which aerosolizes contaminants.
  • Confirm patient ID with two identifiers (e.g., name and DOB) and match the requisition and labels before the stick—red flag: labeling tubes away from the bedside.
  • Select the correct tube/order of draw to prevent additive carryover—common trap: drawing EDTA before serum can falsely alter chemistry results.
  • Choose an appropriate site and avoid contraindicated areas—do not draw above an IV, from an edematous/hematoma site, or on the same side as a mastectomy per facility policy.
  • Apply the tourniquet no longer than 1 minute and release once blood flow is established—red flag: prolonged tourniquet/fist pumping causing hemoconcentration and inaccurate labs.
  • Use proper angle and technique (typically 15–30° for venipuncture) and fill tubes to the intended volume—common trap: underfilling light-blue citrate tubes, invalidating coagulation tests.
  • Maintain hemostasis and monitor for complications—priority rule: if the patient becomes pale, diaphoretic, or dizzy, stop the draw, remove the needle, and assist with syncope precautions.
  • Confirm patient identity with at least two identifiers (e.g., full name and DOB) and match to the requisition before the draw—red flag: drawing based on room number or a verbal “yes” alone.
  • Select the correct venipuncture site (usually median cubital) and avoid contraindications—common trap: drawing from an arm with an IV infusion, fistula/graft, or on the side of a mastectomy without explicit approval.
  • Apply the tourniquet 3–4 inches above the site and do not exceed 1 minute—priority rule: prolonged tourniquet time can cause hemoconcentration and skew results.
  • Perform antisepsis properly (70% isopropyl alcohol; let dry) and do not repalpate after cleaning unless re-cleaned—red flag: blowing on the site or touching it with ungloved fingers.
  • Follow the correct order of draw and invert additive tubes the required number of times—common trap: shaking tubes (hemolysis) or drawing additives out of order causing additive carryover.
  • Label tubes immediately at the bedside after collection (not at the desk) with required identifiers, date/time, and collector ID per policy—red flag: any unlabeled or mismatched specimen is a reject in NHA-style scenarios.
  • Blood culture collection: scrub the site (and culture bottle tops) per facility policy and don’t repalpate after antisepsis—red flag: touching the site is a common contamination trap that can falsely suggest bacteremia.
  • Capillary (finger/heel) specimens: wipe away the first drop and avoid excessive squeezing—common trap: “milking” causes hemolysis/tissue-fluid dilution and can skew glucose, potassium, and CBC results.
  • Blood bank (type & screen/crossmatch): verify patient ID against the armband and label at the bedside immediately—priority rule: mislabeling is a never-event risk that can lead to fatal transfusion reactions.
  • Timed specimens (e.g., peak/trough drug levels, glucose tolerance, cortisol): document exact draw time and follow the timing window strictly—red flag: drawing even 15–30 minutes off schedule can invalidate interpretation.
  • Therapeutic phlebotomy: monitor for vasovagal signs (pallor, diaphoresis, hypotension) and stop/notify per protocol—contraindication cue: proceeding despite symptomatic hypotension increases syncope and injury risk.
  • Special handling requirements: protect light-sensitive specimens (e.g., bilirubin) and maintain temperature needs (e.g., ammonia on ice) with prompt transport—common trap: room-temperature delay can rapidly alter analyte levels.
  • Verify specimen labeling at the bedside (two identifiers) and match to the requisition before leaving the room—red flag: any unlabeled tube is rejected and must be recollected.
  • Follow order of draw and gentle inversion counts for additives (e.g., EDTA, citrate) to prevent clotting or hemolysis—common trap: shaking tubes causes hemolysis and can invalidate potassium and other analytes.
  • Process time- and temperature-sensitive specimens promptly (e.g., ammonia on ice, lactic acid on ice, blood gases expedited)—priority rule: if you can’t meet stability limits, notify the lab immediately.
  • Centrifuge using correct speed/time and allow serum to clot fully before spinning—contraindication: spinning a partially clotted specimen can create fibrin strands that clog analyzers.
  • Aliquot and transfer using sterile technique and the correct labeled transport container, keeping caps closed to avoid aerosols—red flag: pouring between tubes risks contamination and is not acceptable processing practice.
  • Package and transport specimens per policy (biohazard bag with separate requisition pouch, upright when required) and document chain-of-custody when applicable—common trap: placing paperwork in the same pouch as the specimen risks contamination and rejection.
  • Verify patient identity with two identifiers and confirm the order (resting vs. continuous/telemetry) before applying leads—red flag: monitoring the wrong patient or wrong test type.
  • Prep skin properly (clean, dry, shave excess hair, light abrasion if allowed) to lower impedance—common trap: skipping prep causes artifact that mimics dysrhythmia.
  • Place leads using correct landmarks (e.g., V1 4th ICS RSB, V2 4th ICS LSB, V4 5th ICS MCL, V3 between V2/V4, V5 AAL, V6 MAL)—priority rule: misplacement can create false ST changes or axis shifts.
  • Recognize and troubleshoot artifact (loose electrodes, movement, muscle tremor, AC interference) before calling a rhythm—red flag: “ventricular fibrillation” that disappears when the patient talks or you stabilize the cable.
  • Identify urgent rhythms and act per facility protocol (e.g., asystole, sustained VT, symptomatic bradycardia, new wide-complex tachycardia)—threshold cue: if no pulse or altered mental status, treat as an emergency, not just a strip.
  • Document rhythm strips with patient name/ID, date/time, lead used, and clinical symptoms, and promptly report significant changes—common trap: saving an unlabeled strip that can’t be used for clinical decision-making.


Built to Fit Into Your Busy Life

Everything you need to prepare with confidence—without wasting a minute.

Three Study Modes

Timed, No Time Limit, or Explanation mode.

Actionable Analytics

Heatmaps and scaled scores highlight weak areas.

High-Yield Rationales

Concise explanations emphasize key concepts.

Realistic Interface

Matches the feel of the actual exam environment.

Accessible by Design

Clean layout reduces cognitive load.

Anytime, Anywhere

Web-based access 24/7 on any device.

Answering a Question screen – Multiple-choice item view with navigation controls and progress tracker.
Answering a Question Multiple-choice item view with navigation controls and progress tracker.

                           Detailed Explanation screen – 
                         Review mode showing chosen answer and rationale and references.
Detailed Explanation Review mode showing chosen answer and rationale and references.

                           Review Summary 1 screen – 
                         Summary with counts for correct/wrong/unanswered and not seen items.
Review Summary 1 Summary with counts for correct/wrong/unanswered and not seen items.

                           Review Summary 2 screen – 
                         Advanced summary with category/domain breakdown and performance insights.
Review Summary 2 Advanced summary with category/domain breakdown and performance insights.

What Each Screen Shows

Answer Question Screen

  • Clean multiple-choice interface with progress bar.
  • Mark for review feature.
  • Matches real test pacing.

Detailed Explanation

  • Correct answer plus rationale.
  • Key concepts and guidelines highlighted.
  • Move between questions to fill knowledge gaps.

Review Summary 1

  • Overall results with total questions and scaled score.
  • Domain heatmap shows strengths and weaknesses.
  • Quick visual feedback on study priorities.

Review Summary 2

  • Chart of correct, wrong, unanswered, not seen.
  • Color-coded results for easy review.
  • Links back to missed items.

Top 10 Reasons to Use Exam Edge for your NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Exam Prep

  1. Focused on the NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Exam

    Our practice tests are built specifically for the NHA CPCTA exam — every question mirrors the real topics, format, and difficulty so you're studying exactly what matters.

  2. Real Exam Simulation

    We match the per-question time limits and pressure of the actual NHA exam, so test day feels familiar and stress-free.

  3. 10 Full Practice Tests & 1,000 Unique Questions

    You'll have more than enough material to master every NHA CPCTA concept — no repeats, no fluff.

  4. Lower Cost Than a Retake

    Ordering 5 practice exams costs less than retaking the NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant exam after a failure. One low fee could save you both time and money.

  5. Flexible Testing

    Need to step away mid-exam? Pick up right where you left off — with your remaining time intact.

  6. Instant Scoring & Feedback

    See your raw score and an estimated NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant score immediately after finishing each practice test.

  7. Detailed Explanations for Every Question

    Review correct and incorrect answers with clear, step-by-step explanations so you truly understand each topic.

  8. Trusted & Accredited

    We're fully accredited by the Better Business Bureau and uphold the highest standards of trust and transparency.

  9. Web-Based & Always Available

    No software to install. Access your NHA CPCTA practice exams 24/7 from any computer or mobile device.

  10. Expert Support When You Need It

    Need extra help? Our specialized tutors are highly qualified and ready to support your NHA exam prep.


Pass the NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Exam with Realistic Practice Tests from Exam Edge

Preparing for your upcoming NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant (CPCT) Certification Exam can feel overwhelming — but the right practice makes all the difference. Exam Edge gives you the tools, structure, and confidence to pass on your first try. Our online practice exams are built to match the real NHA CPCTA exam in content, format, and difficulty.

  • 📝 10 NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Practice Tests: Access 10 full-length exams with 100 questions each, covering every major NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant topic in depth.
  • Instant Online Access: Start practicing right away — no software, no waiting.
  • 🧠 Step-by-Step Explanations: Understand the reasoning behind every correct answer so you can master NHA CPCTA exam concepts.
  • 🔄 Retake Each Exam Up to 4 Times: Build knowledge through repetition and track your improvement over time.
  • 🌐 Web-Based & Available 24/7: Study anywhere, anytime, on any device.
  • 🧘 Boost Your Test-Day Confidence: Familiarity with the NHA format reduces anxiety and helps you perform under pressure.

These NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant practice exams are designed to simulate the real testing experience by matching question types, timing, and difficulty level. This approach helps you get comfortable not just with the exam content, but also with the testing environment, so you walk into your exam day focused and confident.


Exam Edge NHA Reviews


Your tests were amazing, I am so glad I found your website. I literally passed my test with the highest score I have ever gotten. Thank you so much. To anyone out there going for the Medical Billing and Coding National Certification use this website's tests. They are so worth the money

Rochelle K, Clinton, MO

These tests helped me out tremendously in preparing for my CCMA test. The real test follows these questions closely, and I found these tests to be an important tool in my passing score. Recommend buying all of the practice tests to prepare. Thanks Exam Edge!!

Tori , Idaho



NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Aliases Test Name

Here is a list of alternative names used for this exam.

  • NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant
  • NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant test
  • NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant Certification Test
  • NHA CPCTA test
  • NHA
  • NHA CPCT
  • CPCT test
  • NHA Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant (CPCT)
  • Certified Patient Care Technician Assistant certification