Transcript of Introduction to the FRCPC Exam Ian Rigby The Three Day Quiz.
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- Introduction to the FRCPC Exam Ian Rigby
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- The Three Day Quiz
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- Outline Exam Experience Written Exam Format Preparedness Define
What You Need To Know Timeline to Success Successful Studying Tips
When It Is All Said and Done
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- Exam Experience Registration due by Feb 1, 2008 Exam: May
20-22, 2008 Exam: May 20-22, 2008 It is held in Ottawa at the Royal
College of Physicians and Surgeons building (downtown Ottawa)
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- Exam Experience First two days are the written exam Starts at
0900 each morning 3 hours in length Dress is casual Third day is
the oral exam Can be in the morning or afternoon Dress is
business/professional
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- Written Format 20-25 questions per day (1 booklet/question)
Usually 3 -5 parts to a question Questions will cover the depth and
breadth of Emergency Medicine including relevant anatomy,
patho-physiology, pharmacology, clinical management, systems
administration, recent literature and research methodology. These
are short answer. A word or phrase or at most a couple of
sentences. Has been written this way to help eliminate the
ambiguity of the questions and exam.
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- Old School Format 55 year old male presents to your ED with CP
and the following EKG: Outline your diagnostic and treatment
options and how you would manage this patient.
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- Current Format 55 year old male presents to your ED with chest
pain. His PHx is HTN. He is on no medications and has no allergies.
His EKG is as follows:
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- Example Written Question (1) What cardiac vascular territory is
involved in this patient?:___________________________________ (2)
What is the most commonly affected coronary artery that gives this
EKG picture? ___________________________________ (3) List 5
treatments that could decrease this patients mortality: (a) (b) (c)
(d) (e)
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- Written Format One big hint make sure to turn over all the
pages of the written exam Some questions continue on the backside.
So flip through all of your exam booklets.
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- Preparedness
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- Goal of the exam is to test competency
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- Preparedness But this is competency as a consultant in
emergency medicine
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- Define What You Need to Know I: Critical Management Principles
1.Airway 2. Mechanical Ventilation and Noninvasive Ventilatory
Support 3. Monitoring the Emergency Patient 4. Shock 5. Blood and
Blood Components etc
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- Define What You Need to Know Examiners develop their questions
using common information sources that we all use Texts: Rosens
Emergency Medicine, Tintanellis Study Guide Review Articles:
Emergency Medicine Reports or Emerg Med Clinics of North America.
Hot topics in the public eye: Overcrowding, Sepsis, etc. So use
these resources in your studying
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- Rosens Limitations
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- Rosens Limitation Dermatology Pediatric Presentations Pediatric
elbow UTI Limping child Admin and Research
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- Many of the examiners are academic EM docs involved in other
aspects of EM (Administration, EBM, etc). Many of these issues are
discussed in forums such as CJEM or put into CAEP position
statements and protocols Look at these for ideas of hot topics
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- What Dont You Need to Know?
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- A new study is published in NEJM Jan 2008. A RCT of miraclarone
vs. placebo. This wonder drug converts VF to NSR 100% of the time,
safely sedates intoxicated head injured patients, restores night
shift deranged circadian rhythms and treats male pattern baldness.
Also had an underpowered trend towards making people win the 649
lottery Will this study be on your exam?
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- Question Development Topic Areas Generated (Wide variety of
topics) Questions and Answers Developed/Refined Incorporation of
question into the examination Trialing of Question/Answer
Performance
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- What Dont You Need to Know? How well should you know drug
dosing? Know: Resuscitation drugs Drugs used in time dependent
situations Commonly used drugs
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- What Dont You Need to Know? Finally, if youre unsure if you
need to know this or not, ask yourself if one of your preceptors
would know this.
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- Successful Studying Tips
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- Timelines for Success StudyCompletion DateNotes Rosen Chapter 1
Notes and Review Sept 25, 2007Lets begin! Rosen Chapter 2 Notes and
Review Sept 30, 2007Sick of studying already etc Drink BeerMay 18,
2008If I dont know it now
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- Timelines for Success TaskTime Rosens NotesX Weeks Non-Rosens
Material1-2 Weeks Review of all Material2-4 weeks Buffer Time1-2
Weeks
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- Successful Studying Tips Incorporate review time while making
your notes By the time you get half way through Rosens youll forget
what youd made notes on. So prior to your reading/note taking
session spend half an hour reviewing some of your previous
notes.
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- Successful Studying Tips Anticipate the Exam Questions After
each chapter you read or article you review, list the 3-5 most
likely examination questions that could come from this. Is a good
review for later in your studying. (Review Qs, flashcards, etc.)
Predicted >50% of my FRCP exam questions this way
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- Successful Studying Tips Its late, Im short on time and need to
develop a good question with a standardized answer. Tables are
worth their weight in gold for exam questions!
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- Think Like A Herd Of Examiners Questions are unlikely to be on
contentious areas of medicine. i.e. What is the best drug for
converting afib? Less likely to ask about trivia i.e. What is the
correct pediatric dosing of ilbutilide if using it for tet spells
in a 6kg child? Should know drug doses for resuscitation and
commonly used drugs, though DONT STUDY MINUTIA Recall this Process:
Review of question by Committee and evaluations Questions and
answer key developed
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- Successful Study Tips Dont spend time making detailed notes on
areas you already know well Your notes are not meant to be a
complete text of emergency medicine, but a study tool for areas you
dont know well.
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- I Dont Know This! Everyone will run into questions they only
know partial answers or dont know at all. Spend a couple of minutes
before the exam figuring out how youll handle the I dont know
question. Dont mess up the next set of questions by stewing on the
one you missed!
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- After Its All Said and Done... Your marks from the written and
the orals are reviewed by the exam committee Your identity is
blinded to the committee Pass/Fail decision is made on the
composite score of the written (50%) and orals (50%) Thus, you can
fail one part and still pass the exam
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- After Its All Said and Done... Approximately 1 - 2 days after
the exam, you log onto the Royal College Website and receive a
letter as to whether youve passed or failed the examination.
Website: rcpsc.medical.org
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- After Its All Said and Done... Almost everyone will pass! If
the news is bad.. You will receive a formal evaluation from the
Royal College about your areas of deficiency. This is general in
nature. The results of your examination can be appealed. But this
is a difficult option.
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- Appeals The Royal College will hear appeals about your
examination on the basis of an unfair examination process Extreme
circumstances (i.e. you go into labour part way through your orals)
are handled on an individual basis. You cannot appeal the exam
results based on the content of the questions (i.e. Question #5 was
stupid because..) Review the process of appeals in your candidates
guidelines by the RCPSC
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- After Its All Said and Done... Remember that most everyone will
pass So dont get too worried about the Little Three Day Quiz
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