276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Cases for PACES, 3rd Edition

£15.475£30.95Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

Each hospital in the UK has a dedicated postgraduate education unit and the MRCP PACES exam at that centre will be organised locally through this department. As such they will be able to inform you whether they can provide you with accommodation and how much it would cost or otherwise give you local advice about hotels that are nearby and travelling options. That’s a lot of work. Which is why your fees are so high, even though the examiners are unpaid volunteers. The following set of informative videos outlines the new 10-minute communication encounters and 20-minute clinical consultations within PACES23. Hear from Dr Stuart Hood, Associate Medical Director for Clinical Examinations, as well as observe several roleplayed scenarios. Introduction What you could get is bronchiectasis as a complication of a previous severe pneumonia. Even though that is less common in day to day hospital medicine, it is more likely to come up in an exam. And we’ve tallied and aggregated them for you here to provide the ultimate overview of MRCP PACES cases. Stations one and three

That was the advice I was given when I started out preparing for my MRCP PACES – by a very experienced examiner. MRCP PACES (Practical Assessment of Clinical Examination Skills) is a clinical exam testing clinical knowledge and skills of doctors hoping to begin higher specialist training (ST3). Seven core skills are assessed in PACES: Physical Examination, Identifying Physical Signs, Clinical Communication, Differential Diagnosis, Clinical Judgement, Managing Patients’ Concerns, and Maintaining Patients’ Concerns. Use a variety of resources and real life practice to strengthen all these skills.

PACES Core Skills

Our PACES subscription contains a variety of cases for each PACES station. The layout of the stations and the subject matter simulates the real exam allowing you to revise for a clinical exam online. As well as clinical videos our PACES preparation resource contains a variety of resources which help you to gain the theoretical knowledge needed to pass PACES. These include MRCP PACES tips for each station, role-play material which enables you to replicate the cases in each station, and MRCP PACES podcasts. The number of conditions here is far more varied, as anything can come up (including with actors rather than patients). We still want you to have a great chance to clear your exam, though – so we’re proud to present a “Top Twenty” conditions to ensure you get adequate curriculum coverage. When researching your exam centre it is important to make sure that there is at least 3-4 hours after the official end of your exam before you travel away from the exam centre. If there are delays in the exam you do not want to be worrying about travelling afterwards and only want to be focusing on the exam.

We have found over 3,000 different accounts of MRCP PACES exams, and what cases came up for various candidates. I’m sure that if you’ve got as far as entering PACES you’ll have seen patients with pneumonia come into hospital.The MRCP PACES exam consists of a ‘carousel’ containing five clinical stations. Each station is 20 minutes long and there is a 5 minute interval between stations. Two independent examiners oversee each PACES station where there is a patient with a given condition, or a surrogate patient.

Cover all these “Top Ten’s” in detail and you’ll have covered a disproportionately large chunk of the curriculum. There’s a decent chance that if you have a sound ability to diagnose these conditions then you’ll clear PACES entirely.. We can’t promise that these will come up – but know these conditions inside out and you’ll have taken the most rational approach possible to your preparation and placed the odds on your side. Station five It’s also not very likely to come up. The patient’s clinical signs would be expected to have recovered in between being recruited and the exam day. We wanted to create the most accurate summary in existence of what cases can come up in MRCP PACES. Another great example would be a young patient with asthma. They come in with a widespread wheeze throughout their chest. But come exam day their chest could easily be completely clear.We’ve listed the ten most common cases for all of respiratory, abdominal, neurology and cardiology. It can give rise to bronchial breathing, crepitations in the chest or even a parapneumonic effusion – all great clinical signs. But we can tell you exactly which cases come up most commonly in MRCP PACES, based on the most comprehensive survey ever conducted of previous candidates. Our sources

If you understand how MRCP PACES is organised, you gain an insight into why certain clinical cases are much more likelyto come up than others. Now in full colour, it features new case material, updated content on ethics and law, and revised brief clinical consultations that better reflect the current exam. Cases for PACES also includes hints and tips for preparing for the exam, and what to expect on the day.

Section author

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment