"A resource that takes into consideration the time-pressures of long shifts & the sheer volume of knowledge that is required for these post-graduate exams" - Dr. Isabel Walters (Cheshire, UK)
"Your work really helped me with the MRCP Part 2 written exam & I'm happy to let you know that I managed to pass it on my first attempt" - Dr. Joel George (Belgaum, India)
The purpose of this book is crystal clear: to help you pass your exams through productive and efficient learning. It breaks up revision into manageable chunks so that it does not feel daunting, tedious or impractical. In fact, if you spend just 1 minute immersed in its text, you will learn a thing or two. You don't even have to start at the beginning, you can start anywhere you like!
Now although these exams are separate entities, they build upon each other with increasing relevance to clinical practice. For example you need MRCP Part 1 knowledge to pass MRCP Part 2. You need MRCP Part 2 knowledge to pass PACES & the Acute Medicine SCE.
This book provides such scope and addresses an array of topics across the many syllabi. It functions as a hybrid between an MCQ book and a textbook, presenting these topics as high yield facts. Each fact is in the form of a question to mirror the exams. However, unlike MCQ books, you don't have to annoyingly jump to the back to read the answer. The answer is right under the question.
There are many benefits to this approach:
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About the author
Dr. Muzzammil Ali is the founder of the Instagram page @mrcpfacts. He is a registrar in the United Kingdom, training in 2 different specialties: Acute Internal Medicine & Critical Care Medicine.
This career choice means that he has done many postgraduate exams including MRCP Part 1, Part 2, PACES & the Acute Medicine SCE. More recently in April 2022, he also completed the Fellowship of the Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine (FFICM) examinations.
His passion for education has driven him to become the Lead of Education at one of the largest tertiary hospitals in the UK, the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, and an Honorary Clinical Lecturer at the University of Birmingham.
Through his revision, he faced 3 main challenges: