Friday 2 July 2010

Books etc to prepare for MRCS OSCE

When preparing for my OSCES I asked my friend Essie who had already sat and passed her exams for advice on which books to revise with. Although I didn't use al the books she recommended due to time limitations, here are the books I did use:


  1. Instant Anatomy: great little book for brushing up on blood vessels, nerves etc... to be used as memory aid rather than for learning from scratch. The free podcasts from the website are also really good.
  2. Netter's anatomy atlas. Excellent for learning anatomy from scratch.
  3. Get Through MRCS: Anatomy Vivas by Simon Overstall. This book is amazing. 96 pages of anatomy vivas and model answers which really help with structuring answers for exam. It was the one book I couldn't have done on demand.  
  4. Master Pass: MRCS Picture Questions Book 2 by Tang and Praveen. This book covered Trauma and Orthopaedics, Transplant, Vascular, Paediatric and Breast surgery. It has amazing pictures and excellent explanations. Can be used as a learning aid.
  5. MRCS clinical question book by Catherine Parchment Smith. This book was good for structuring your clinical examinations and useful for anticipating questions around each topic. I dipped into it occasionally but did not use it very much as I was happy with my clinical examinations. Good for targeting weak areas or checking your examinations are in good shape.
  6. Rafftery's MRCS book. I used this book for Part A and the pathology section for Part B.
In addition to books I also bought 2 apps on my iphone. Netter's flash cards were useful but I did not learn much from them and it was an expensive app (£20). Rohen's anatomy app is excellent (£15) as it uses dissections and really handy for exam practice as you get dissections in 2 of the anatomy stations.

I also bought the OSCE Cases online course from Pastest as it was on offer for £69. Although they need to do alot of work on the format and increase the content, I thought that Prof Ellis' anatomy lectures were amazing and the OSCE tutorials on the different examinations were excellent. I would not pay more than £69 for the course as it is but if they improve it (Alot of improvements need doing) then it may rival more expensive courses. 

Internet wise, the following free website was absolutely amazing. It allows you to create your own anatomy quiz and uses dissections. The link is http://ect.downstate.edu/courseware/haonline/quiz/practice/u7/quiztop7.htm . Definitely worth trying out. I also discovered Acland's atlas of human anatomy which is a video atlas. You can download/view on University of Warwick's website and youtube. I thought it was very useful as a break from books.

As for critical care, I used the notes I made from the RCS Course that I went on instead of a book. However, if you don't go on the course, these two books cover everything you will need (we got given them free for the course):

  1. Surgical Critical Care Vivas by Kanani
  2. Applied Surgical Physiology Vivas by Kanani and Elliot

Anyway, I may have gone a little OTT with learning resources but I managed to use all of the above materioals in one way or another to target my weaknesses and it seems to have worked. The trick is to not use everything at once but to start with one or two books and add other learning materials as needed because your weak spots will become evident. Closer to the exam you can start whittling down the books you need.