Archive for June, 2008

 

Course Study

Jun 30, 2008 in Study

Are you about to embark on an expensive course to try and help you pass the final?
You’ve hoarded your study leave, swapped your nights into doing 7 nights in a row, left your significant other and shipped yourself off for a week in strange parts of the country you’ve never seen and never will again?
Or you’ve managed to escape the humdrum day to day work of the operating room to get yourself onto a day release course?

Well, here’s a tip.
Don’t take any notes.

Okay, perhaps that’s a little exaggeration. Let me go into more detail.

EI previously noted the potential for Mind Maps in another post, and described how to use those. Here’s another cunning ploy. Use only essential keywords. Take your mindmaps to the next level and only write down a few really key central points during the lecture, and focus your entire mind on what the speaker is saying. Even better: interact with the speaker (this will give your brain an extra “hook” to hang the lecture on.

Instead of keeping a record of the lecture on paper, use a dictaphone to record the lecture. From the recording, using very simple software, almost always already on your computer, you can transfer the file from the dictaphone to an MP3 file which any player can play back. You can then take a look at your keywords document whilst you’re eating breakfast in the morning, and listen to the lecture on the train/bus/walking/car journey to work, when you come to revise.

Robert Whitaker over at InstantAnatomy.net has some excellent podcasts and audiovisual lectures on his CD, which you can use as an example (though his AV presentations are much more detailed than your notes ought to be). These were staple listening in the run up to the exam (MCQ/SAQ and the vivas).

You might think that this won’t work for things like physiology/pharmacology etc, but you’d be surprised at how effective it can be. Try just jotting down graphs without the masses of detail, or the drug molecules off the board. Don’t write down every single point, because that’s where you get distracted. Give it a try….



Del.Icio.Us link fixed

Jun 28, 2008 in Uncategorized

Many apologies for the broken link, which we’ve only just got around to fixing.

The bookmarks can be found at del.icio.us

The Last Day…

Jun 27, 2008 in Learn

This is the final day of Final FRCA vivas, and EI hopes
many people have passed the exam. For those of you who
have yet to sit the exam this coming Autumn, all the best
of luck.

The last question we can tell you about, as intelligence
received has run thin in the last 24 hours, was a
pharmacology question which came up about the use of
NSAIDs, including the pathway and enzymes they act on and
the implications of their use and the controversy of COX-2
selective inhibitors and why increased cardiovascular
deaths occurred.

EI is going to take a (quite frankly well deserved) break
for a few days, before starting to home in on further
tips, tricks and techniques for studying, learning,
remembering and most importantly passing the Final
Examination.

Please keep visiting, as there is something new on the
horizon which is going to be developed behind the scenes,
and will initially be released in bits and pieces before
coming together in one fell swoop.

Congratulations to all those who passed, and our
comiserations for those of you that didn’t. Stick with EI
and we will try to bring you information to maximise your
chances of success.

A little further Viva intelligence

Jun 26, 2008 in Learn

EI has heard about some more exam questions that have come up in the vivas this week, so here we go:

-Describe the pathophysiology of ARDS
-Describe your management of a patient with ARDS
-How do you optimise PEEP?
-How do you optimise PEEP if you don’t have fancy ventilators(!)?

-Draw a saggital section of the eye.
-Describe the anatomy.
-Mark the insertion of the conjunctiva into the sclera.
-Why is the anatomy of the eye important to anaesthetists?

A physics/measurement question on CPX and examining a CPX test result came up.

Future Sounds…
Keep an eye on this blog for some well researched answers to the questions that have come up in this last Final FRCA Exam.
Also, as the next sitting approaches, EI will bring together more resources, and simplified explanations of topics that might come up. Hopefully we can help others achieve the same success we have, by sharing some of our revision tips and tricks, and some of the cunning ploys we adopted.
We welcome any suggestions and questions, please feel free to comment or contact EI on the email link in the right-hand column.

If you have a topic you struggle with, ask us, and we will try to help.

If you are still waiting to take your viva tomorrow: GOOD LUCK!


Question some more?

Jun 25, 2008 in Learn

Firstly, E.I. hears that the questions today included THAT
kyphoscoliotic lady for cholecystectomy, a head injured
child with fractured tib and fib, a question about
categorisation of Emergency LSCS, and a question about
heart blocks. More detailed information than that has not
really yet come this way.

Secondly, for those doing the Final FRCA in the
future….the grapevine has told us that The Clinical
Anaesthesia Viva book is going to reach us in a second
incarnation sometime soon, so keep your eyes peeled for
that one….

If you have any information you want to share, please pass
it on to examintelligence”AT”googlemail.com .

Good luck to anyone still awaiting their viva!