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
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★★★★★
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."
Review the patientβs notes, resuscitation status, and recent events with the nursing team β was the death expected/unexpected?
Wash hands
Introduce yourself to the family if present, say you are sorry for their loss, and explain what you need to do
Ask if they want to be present or not
Confirm the patientβs identity on their wristband (name, hospital number, DOB)
All criteria below must be met and documented:
Criteria to be met and documented
PupilsΒ fixed and dilated (with no response to light)
NoΒ ventilation observed/breath soundsΒ on auscultation (1 minute)
NoΒ central pulseΒ palpable (1 minute)
NoΒ heart soundsΒ on auscultation (1 minute)
NoΒ response to painful stimulusΒ (e.g. squeezing trapezius)
Cover the patient in a dignified manner
Document the above findings with the date and time at the end of the assessment in the notes (include your full name and role)
When you can fill out the death certificate
All of the criteria below must be met:
You must be a registered medical practitioner
You mut have attended the deceased in their lifetime
You must have βknowledge and beliefβ of the cause of death and the proposed cause of death must be agreed with the consultant and independent medical examiner service
The death must not meet criteria for referral to the coroner (see box below)
Cases requiring referral to the coroner
Unnatural or violent
Common examples:
Poisoning/overdose
Toxic substance exposure
Due to use of medicine/drug
Due to violence/trauma/injury
Due to self-harm
Due to neglect/self-neglect
Related to a medical procedure
Cause of death related to employment
Concerns about standard of care
Unknown cause
Unknown cause of death
In custody or other state detention
Patient was in custody/state detention at time of death
Filling out a death certificate
Demographics
Name, age, DOB
Details of death
Place of death
Date of death and date you last saw the patient alive (format: βThirdΒ day ofΒ November 2017β)
Whether a post-mortem is required or you have reported the death to the coroner
Who saw the patient after death (you/another medical practitioner/not seen after death by a medical practitioner)
Cause
Format:
Ia: the immediate cause of death
Ib: condition leading to Ia
Ic: condition leading to Ib
II: other conditions contributing to death (but unrelated to condition in part I)
Example:
Ia: Pulmonary Thromboembolism
Ib: Deep Vein Thrombosis
II: Metastatic prostate cancer
Tips:
Do not use abbreviations or symbols
Give as much information as possible (but you donβt need to fill out all sections)
Avoid the terms: any organ failure without a causative condition, old age, natural causes
Your details
Name, role, qualifications, General Medical Council number, signature
Test yourself – how would you list the causes of death for these scenarios?
A 54 year old man with a history of polymyalgia rheumatica was admitted with a stroke. He had an unsafe swallow and developed an aspiration pneumonia. He became progressively more hypoxic and sustained a cardiac arrest. Resuscitation was unsuccessful.
An 84 year old with Parkinson’s disease, hypertension, COPD and previous CABG was admitted with a community acquired pneumonia. She sustained a type 2 myocardial infarction during admission. She was also noted to be in atrial fibrillation and started on apixaban. Three days later she developed large volume haematemesis and melaena. Blood products were transfused but she lost cardiac output and CPR was unsuccessful.
A 42 year old man was admitted with hepatic encephalopathy and liver failure. He is a known diabetic and had been under the hepatology clinic for chronic active Hepatitis B and liver cirrhosis before being lost to follow up. He was known to drink alcohol to excess. He was deemed not fit for a liver transplant and died three days after admission.