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Apex Nursing

Chart — Professional Practice

Levels of Prevention Chart

One question classifies any intervention: what is the person’s disease status? No disease → primary. Undiagnosed, being screened → secondary. Diagnosed, limiting the damage → tertiary. The chart sorts the examples exams actually use.

Educational use only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Three Levels

Primary

Prevent disease before it exists

Ask: Is the person healthy, with no sign of this disease?

  • Immunizations and vaccine clinics
  • Seatbelt, helmet, and safe-sleep teaching
  • Smoking prevention programs in schools
  • Prenatal folic acid; fluoridated water
  • Hand hygiene education for the public
  • Exercise and nutrition programs for healthy adults

Secondary

Detect disease early, before or at first symptoms

Ask: Are we screening or case-finding in someone not yet diagnosed?

  • Mammograms, colonoscopies, Pap tests
  • Blood pressure and glucose screening at health fairs
  • TB skin testing of exposed contacts
  • Newborn metabolic screening
  • Depression and intimate-partner-violence screening
  • Vision and scoliosis screening in schools

Tertiary

Limit disability and complications of established disease

Ask: Does the diagnosis already exist, and are we managing its consequences?

  • Cardiac rehab after MI; stroke rehabilitation
  • Diabetic foot care and A1c management teaching
  • Support groups (cancer survivors, AA)
  • Physical therapy after injury
  • Wound care for an existing pressure injury
  • Medication adherence programs for chronic disease

The Trap Items

InterventionLevelWhy
Teaching a diabetic about foot careTertiaryThe disease exists — education about managing it is tertiary, even though 'teaching' sounds primary
Screening an asymptomatic smoker with low-dose CTSecondaryScreening = secondary, regardless of risk factors
Teaching a healthy teen about smoking risksPrimaryNo disease present — preventing it from starting
Giving the flu vaccine to a heart-failure patientPrimaryClassify by the target disease: influenza isn't present, so prevention of it is primary — comorbidity doesn't change the level
Bedside swallow screen after strokeSecondary-style screening within tertiary careExams usually frame post-stroke rehab measures as tertiary; isolated 'screening' wording points secondary — read what the question targets

Exam Traps

  • Classify by disease status, never by activity type — teaching appears at all three levels.
  • The word 'screening' is a secondary-prevention flag; 'rehab' and 'support group' flag tertiary.
  • Immunization is the canonical primary answer — even in patients with other chronic diseases.
  • Classify against the disease the intervention targets, not the patient's other diagnoses.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with ANA Code of Ethics & Scope/Standards of Practice · NCSBN · HIPAA (U.S. HHS). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →