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HiraEdu helps CMA II candidates organize Board documentation, review insulin-related judgment, and practice the 50-question Prov outline before scheduling.
CMA II preparation requires tight control of eligibility documents and advanced medication-aide judgment. Candidates should verify nurse educator submission, CPR evidence, preceptor supervision, retake limits, and the two-hour outline covering pharmacology, legal administration, PRN judgment, emergency care, medication-error prevention, and expanded scope boundaries.
Use these checkpoints to confirm Board requirements, advanced scope content, and Prov test-day rules.
CMA II is a New Mexico Board of Nursing certification exam administered by Prov for candidates completing the Board's advanced medication aide pathway.
NMBON CMA II prerequisites include approved CMA training, nurse educator verification, current CPR card, application, fee, and direct clinical preceptor supervision until passing.
The CMA II exam is 50 questions in two hours, with content in pharmacology, legal administration, anatomy, practical skills, PRN judgment, emergencies, and medication-error prevention.
The current NMBON Prov CIB lists an 80% cut score, $80 per attempt, Prov scheduling, current photo ID, three-business-day rescheduling, and State result reporting.
CMA II adds documentation and supervision requirements beyond the basic medication aide page. The Board requires verification from the nurse educator, confirmation that the training program and hours meet Board requirements, a current CPR card, and direct supervision by a board-approved clinical preceptor until the candidate passes. HiraEdu helps candidates gather those items before scheduling so the exam plan matches the Board's certification route.
The CMA II outline is shorter than CMA I but still covers high-risk medication-administration decisions: medications and body systems, anatomy and physiology, legal responsibilities, pharmacology, population-specific care, practical skills, medication terminology, emergency and first aid procedures, PRN medication judgment, client-condition changes, and medication-error risk. Because New Mexico identifies CMA II with expanded functions such as insulin delivery by insulin pen after approved training and examination, HiraEdu places extra emphasis on route, timing, documentation, adverse effects, escalation, and scope boundaries.
The Board page says unsuccessful CMA II candidates may not function as Certified Medication Aides, must remain supervised, wait two months before repeating the examination, and are limited to three attempts before repeating training. The Prov CIB provides appointment, ID, fee, rescheduling, score, challenge, hand-score, and accommodation rules. HiraEdu combines those rules with timed 50-question practice so candidates approach the first attempt with a complete administrative and content plan.
Use this Prov Certified Medication Aide II Exam exam help page for exam-specific context, then compare the broader online exam help services page or contact HiraEdu if you need a direct handoff. This page stays focused on Prov Certified Medication Aide II Exam while the linked service pages cover broader exam support options.
The New Mexico Board of Nursing CMA II page says applicants must have a high school diploma or GED, successfully complete an approved Certified Medication Aide training program, submit a verification letter from the nurse educator on agency letterhead directly to the Board, attach a current CPR card, complete the examination or re-examination application by the deadline, and pay the required fee. The Board page also says unsuccessful CMA II applicants may not function as a Certified Medication Aide, must remain under direct supervision of a board-approved clinical preceptor until passing, may not repeat the examination for two months, and may take the exam a maximum of three times before repeating the training portion of a board-approved medication aide program. The current New Mexico Board of Nursing Prov Candidate Information Bulletin says Prov administers CMA II for the Board, the exam costs $80 per attempt, candidates schedule through Prov, changes or cancellations require at least three business days, current government photo ID is required, results are provided at the testing center and sent to the State, and all listed exams use an 80% cut score. The CMA II exam description lists 50 questions in two hours, with content in Medications and Their Impacts on Body Systems, Anatomy and Physiology, Legal Aspect of Medication Administration, Pharmacology, Population Specific Care, Practical Skills, Medication Terms and Abbreviations, Emergency Care and First Aid Procedures, PRN Medication Administration Requiring Judgment and Client Condition, and the seriousness of medical errors. New Mexico's medication aide rules identify CMA II as an additional certification tied to expanded scope such as subcutaneous insulin delivery by insulin pen after board-approved training and examination. HiraEdu helps candidates confirm eligibility, prepare nurse educator and CPR documentation, study advanced medication safety and insulin-related judgment, drill 50-question timed sets, and plan Prov scheduling, ID, score, challenge, hand-score, accommodation, and retest procedures.
The current NMBON Prov CIB lists the CMA II exam as 50 questions with a two-hour time allowance.
Yes. The New Mexico Board of Nursing CMA II prerequisites include attaching a copy of a current CPR card.
The NMBON Prov CIB states that all listed exams are scored against an 80% cut score.
The Board page says unsuccessful candidates may not function as a CMA, must remain under direct supervision, may not repeat the exam for two months, and may take the exam a maximum of three times before repeating training.
HiraEdu helps candidates organize Board documentation, study advanced medication and insulin-related scope, practice timed 50-question sets, and prepare Prov scheduling, ID, score, challenge, hand-score, accommodation, and retest logistics.
Confirm approved training, nurse educator verification, Board submission, CPR card, application status, fee payment, supervision arrangement, and testing timeline.
Prioritize anatomy, pharmacology, practical skills, legal administration, population care, PRN judgment, emergency steps, medication terms, and medication-error prevention.
Practice insulin-pen readiness, client-condition review, nurse notification, documentation, adverse-reaction recognition, medication timing, and role-boundary questions.
Confirm appointment details, current photo ID, arrival timing, three-business-day rescheduling, score reporting, challenge and hand-score options, accommodations, and retest rules.
Use the guide to self-serve, or talk to a coordinator if you need help mapping timelines, official requirements, or troubleshooting day-of logistics.
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