I'm a care coordinator with a nursing background preparing for the CCP exam. Looking at the content outline, it seems heavily clinical - disease management protocols, evidence-based guidelines for specific chronic conditions, medication management. I'm comfortable with the clinical content, but I'm wondering if the exam also tests care coordination workflow and care planning documentation at the same depth.
My first practice run was 71%, which feels okay but I know I'm losing points on the behavioral health integration questions. Mental health comorbidities are something I deal with daily but my formal training there is thin, and the exam seems to test specific screening tools and intervention frameworks I haven't memorized.
I'm planning 10 weeks of prep at about 75 minutes per day. The exam covers roughly 8 chronic condition clusters and each one has its own evidence-based guideline set to know. Has anyone found a way to organize that material that prevents mixing up the guidelines for different conditions?
Also wondering about the care transitions section - I've heard it's a bigger part of the exam than the content outline suggests. Transitional care and post-acute follow-up are areas where I have strong practical experience, so if those questions are significant, that could be a buffer for me on the behavioral health gaps.
The behavioral health integration section was harder than I expected too. PHQ-9, GAD-7, SBIRT - you need to know the cutoff scores and what actions they trigger, not just that the tools exist. I'd spend at least two full weeks on that domain if you're starting from a weak point.
For keeping the chronic condition guidelines straight, I built condition-specific one-pagers: diagnosis criteria, first-line treatment, key quality metrics, and recommended screening tools. Eight pages total. Reviewing all eight every Sunday kept them from blurring together.
Care transitions questions were significant on my exam - I'd estimate 15-18% of the total. Your practical experience will help but know the specific models like TCM and BOOST by name and their core components. The exam likes to test whether you know which model uses which approach.
The exam is clinical but the questions are more application-based than pure recall. They'll give you a patient profile and ask which intervention or protocol applies, not just ask you to recite a guideline. That framing actually favors clinical experience over memorization.
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