CPAN vs CAPA – which certification to sit for first and how different is the prep?
I've been a perianesthesia nurse for 6 years, split between phase I and phase II recovery. I'm eligible for both the CPAN and CAPA and I've been going back and forth on which to tackle first. My strongest clinical background is definitely phase I — managing emergence, monitoring airways, handling immediate post-op complications.
From what I've read, CPAN is heavier on airway management, hemodynamic monitoring, and the acute physiological changes of emergence from anesthesia. CAPA focuses more on patient education, discharge planning, and ambulatory surgery patients. I've been going through the ABPANC study guide and PanAm Society materials for 9 weeks, about 1.5 hours a day.
Practice scores are sitting around 74% for CPAN content and 68% for CAPA. The passing score is around 75%, so I'm right on the edge for CPAN and not there yet for CAPA. I originally planned to sit for both in the same window but I'm now thinking I should focus on CPAN first and come back for CAPA in 6 months.
Anyone who's done both — did your phase experience transfer as much as you expected? The pharmacology questions around reversal agents and timing have been my biggest challenge.
The pharmacology section on CPAN is detailed. Know your reversal agents: neostigmine timing, sugammadex dosing by weight class, and flumazenil contraindications. Questions go clinical rather than purely pharmacokinetic theory.
I sat for CPAN first and passed, then did CAPA 8 months later. The CAPA surprised me with how much it tested psychosocial patient education principles — there's a lot around patient readiness for discharge and caregiver instruction.
74% on practice is very close to passing territory for the CPAN. You're probably 2 to 3 weeks of targeted review away from being ready — don't switch focus now.
Do CPAN first if that's where your experience is. The content maps directly to phase I practice and you'll feel confident on exam day. Splitting prep between both certifications at once is a recipe for mediocre scores on each.
Honestly, with 6 years weighted toward phase I, I'd just sit for CPAN first and not overthink it. The content will feel familiar enough that you're reinforcing what you already know clinically, which makes studying way less exhausting. What actually helped me retain stuff wasn't grinding flashcards but really interrogating the wrong answers on practice tests. Like when I'd miss a question, I didn't just check the right answer and move on — I'd figure out exactly why each distractor was wrong, because that's where the real pattern recognition lives. The abpanc abpanc perianesthesia complications 3 set is good for this because the complications questions have a lot of plausible distractors that'll trip you up if you're just skimming.
Once you've got CPAN under your belt, CAPA prep is a lot less intimidating — you're basically shifting your mental frame toward phase II considerations rather than learning a whole new body of knowledge. The overlap is significant. Don't try to do both at once though, that's where I've seen people burn out.