NHS Numeracy Mock Test 28
Mock test 28 — 24 questions.
About this mock
Difficulty: IntermediateNHS Numeracy Mock 28 turns weight change calculations into healthcare workplace scenarios that need careful reading. When weight change calculations appears in the question, safe rounding, unit conversion and chart interpretation give the main evidence for the answer. Users should know whether weight change calculations in practice is secure. Within NHS Numeracy Mock 28, the practice stays focused on weight change calculations.
Topics included
- Weight change calculations in practice
- Safe rounding
- Unit conversion
- Chart interpretation
- Question wording and answer choice
Common mistakes in this mock
- Misreading the question about weight change calculations
- Choosing an answer before checking all details
- Confusing safe rounding with unit conversion
- Missing wording that changes the answer
Who this mock is for
Anyone checking whether weight change calculations in practice is ready for harder NHS Numeracy questions.
How to practise
How to use Practice mode
Practice mode shows the correct answer and an explanation after every question, with no timer. Use it the first time you sit a topic, when you want to learn as you go, or when you're targeting a specific weak area.
How to use Exam mode
Exam mode gives timed practice for revision. Official timings vary by exam provider and skill, so always check the official test format before booking.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the NHS numeracy pass mark?
- It varies by trust and role, but most NHS numeracy assessments require around 75–80%. Always check the brief for your specific role.
- Can I use a calculator?
- Some trusts allow a basic calculator; others require mental and written calculation only. The mocks let you practise both ways.
- Are these the same as the NMC CBT calculations?
- Similar in style, but NMC CBT has its own dedicated section. We have a separate NMC CBT topic for international nurses.
- How long should I spend per question?
- Aim for around 1 minute per question on average — fast enough to finish, slow enough to double-check your decimal places.
