1. MLA questions π«: Mapped to the MLA curriculum
2. Taylor francis π§ : over 2500+ questions licenced from 18 text-books worth Β£191
3. Past examiners π«: Questions written by previous Medical School examiners
4. Track your performance πββοΈ: QBank uses intelegent software to keep you on track
The reviews are in
★★★★★
6,893 users
Don't take our word for it
"The stations you provide are strikingly similar to those I came across during my medical school finals (some even verbatim!), and I have tried many other exam platforms. I'm truly grateful for your priceless support throughout my final couple of years at medical school!"
Raza Q π¬π§
"It has absolutely everything for medical school, so many histories with detailed differential diagnoses, how to approach emergencies, commonly prescribed drugs..every kind go examination youβll ever need in osces"
John R π¬π§
"Thank you SO MUCH for the amazing educational resource. Iβve tried lots of platforms and books with mock OSCE stations and yours is by far and away the best Iβve tried"
Ed M π³πΏ
"Get this right away. So helpful for OSCEs but also general clinical learning and understanding. Wish I had brought it sooner"
Emma W π¬π§
"Without a doubt, your platform outshines all other OSCE resources currently available. In all honesty, I can confidently attribute my success in securing a distinction in my finals to OSCEstop."
Harish K π¬π§
"OSCEstop distinguishes itself from many other platform banks by offering a wealth of questions that mimic the demanding and complex aspects of our finals. This platform played a crucial role in ensuring I was ready for the level of difficulty that awaited me in my final exams."
Membership includes access to all 4 parts of the site:
1. Learning π: All notes, viva questions, track progress
2. Stations π₯: 10 years of past medical school stations. Includes: heart murmurs, ECGs, ABGs, CXR
3. Qbank π§ : 2500+ questions from Taylor Francis books, complete MLA coverage
4. Conditions π«: all conditions mapped to MLA, progress tracking
The reviews are in
★★★★★
6,893 users
Don't take our word for it
"The stations you provide are strikingly similar to those I came across during my medical school finals (some even verbatim!), and I have tried many other exam platforms. I'm truly grateful for your priceless support throughout my final couple of years at medical school!"
Raza Q π¬π§
"It has absolutely everything for medical school, so many histories with detailed differential diagnoses, how to approach emergencies, commonly prescribed drugs..every kind go examination youβll ever need in osces"
John R π¬π§
"Thank you SO MUCH for the amazing educational resource. Iβve tried lots of platforms and books with mock OSCE stations and yours is by far and away the best Iβve tried"
Ed M π³πΏ
"Get this right away. So helpful for OSCEs but also general clinical learning and understanding. Wish I had brought it sooner"
Emma W π¬π§
"Without a doubt, your platform outshines all other OSCE resources currently available. In all honesty, I can confidently attribute my success in securing a distinction in my finals to OSCEstop."
Harish K π¬π§
"OSCEstop distinguishes itself from many other platform banks by offering a wealth of questions that mimic the demanding and complex aspects of our finals. This platform played a crucial role in ensuring I was ready for the level of difficulty that awaited me in my final exams."
Nervous system: GCS, limb movements, abbreviated mental test score if elderly/confused
Examine the relevant system in more detail and specifically document the presence/absence of signs of differential diagnoses
Review any investigations that have already been performed (e.g. bloods, X-rays etc.)
Formulate a differential diagnosis/impression/problem list and plan investigations/management based on the above
Document
Date and time
Patient age and sex
History
Presenting complaint
History of presenting complaint (e.g. main symptoms as separate major bullet points, with sub-bullet points exploring each symptom, and then relevant system reviews as further major bullet points β include relevant positives and negatives)
Symptom A
Explore
Explore
Symptom B
Explore
Explore
Relevant system review A
Relevant system review B
PMHx (supplement with information from computerised records)
DHx (including allergies)
FHx (relevant conditions)
SHx (must be very thorough in elderly patients β get collateral)
Examination
Investigation results so far
Differential diagnosis/impression/problem list
Plan
Investigations
Management
Other considerations
Sign with name, role, bleep
Arrange investigations
Perform
Site cannula and take bloods from cannula (consider doing this before taking a history so results are back quicker)
Undertake other relevant investigations, e.g. ABG, lumbar puncture, blood cultures
Ask nursing staff
Bedside tests, e.g. ECG, urine dip (Β± MC&S), swabs
Order/perform any other disease-specific interventions
Fill in a VTEassessment
Keep patient NBM if surgery may be required
Review
Note down the patientβs details and which investigations need to be chased (use fill-in boxes β half fill when taken/requested, fully fill when result back and checked)
Follow-up the results and document them in the notes
Change/initiate treatments if needed
Present to seniors (when initial investigation results are back) and implement any additional management plans required
Tips!
You will need to write quickly during the consultation but try to ensure the patient is still the main focus
Look through all the computerised records (e.g. GP record, discharges, letters, investigation results) for the patient to supplement the past medical/drug history
In some elderly patients, you may need to call the next of kin or nursing/residential home for collateral history (find out what happened and get more information about past/drug/social history and their baseline)
Ensure you are leading the consultation β learn how to interrupt patients politely. If the patient is very talkative, use closed, focussed questions.
Never forget your communication skills β introduce yourself properly, use the patientβs name, shake their hand, build rapport, start with open questions and find out their ideas, concerns and expectations
Learn more…
We have notes on advancing your clinical practice here!