CPHT phlebotomy certification — how many venipuncture draws did you need before sitting?
I'm a phlebotomy student finishing up my program in 6 weeks and I'll be eligible to sit for the CPHT practice test shortly after. My program requires 100 successful venipuncture draws before certification, and I'm at 78 draws right now, so I'll hit the requirement easily. My practical skills feel solid but I'm less confident about the knowledge exam content.
I've been studying from my program textbook for about 4 weeks at 45 minutes a day. Practice scores are around 63–66%. The sections where I lose most points are specimen processing and handling (centrifuge times, additive tubes, temperature requirements) and the anatomy sections on vascular variation and difficult draw sites.
How much of the CPHT knowledge exam is collection procedure versus specimen processing versus anatomy/physiology? I want to know whether to double down on processing knowledge or invest more time in anatomy given my current gaps.
Also: order of draw questions—everyone says they show up a lot. Is it really as high-frequency as the prep materials suggest or is that overemphasized?
78 draws at this stage is solid practical experience. The knowledge exam feels very different from the clinical work because it asks you to verbalize and categorize what you're doing intuitively. The gap between doing and explaining is real for most phlebotomy students.
At 63–66% with 6 weeks left, you have time to move that score up significantly. I was at 62% at week 4 of studying and passed with a comfortable margin after 10 total weeks at about an hour a day.
Order of draw is legitimately one of the most tested topics—not overemphasized. It appeared in multiple forms on my exam: direct "what comes first" questions, scenario questions about contamination from incorrect order, and questions about why the order matters for specific additive types. Know it cold in both directions.
The breakdown I experienced was roughly 35% collection procedures, 30% specimen processing, 25% anatomy/physiology, and 10% regulations/safety. Your gaps in processing and anatomy together are about 55% of the exam—that's where to focus.
Additive tubes are the heart of the specimen processing section—EDTA, heparin, SST, citrate, and what each does to the sample. Know which tube prevents coagulation versus promotes it, what the additive-to-blood ratio is for citrate tubes, and how improper mixing affects results. Those come up in multiple question formats.
Temperature requirements for different specimen types (cold chain for blood gases, room temp for certain coags) are a secondary priority but definitely testable.