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How to Pass the MRCS OSCE Volume 1
Edited by Pradip K. Datta, Chris Bulstrode, and Vasha Kaur
576 pages
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Over 130 photographs and illustrations
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246x171mm
978-0-19-958299-0
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Paperback
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08 September 2011
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- Equips MRCS candidates with everything they need to know to succeed in the OSCE examination
- Over 130 photographs and illustrations aid revision
- Comprehensive revision for areas that often prove difficult, including communication skills
- Contains hundreds of practice scenarios and model answers
This is the only guide you need to pass the MRCS Part B OSCE examination. Written by a team of editors and authors with extensive experience of the exam and all the recent changes, it covers topics that can prove to be difficult, including communication and history taking. Volume 1 covers basic surgical skills, including peri-operative care, as well as patient safety, history-taking, communication skills, applied surgical sciences and critical care. Practice scenarios and model answers show you exactly how the examiners will expect you to approach the exam. It also includes over 130 photographs and illustrations to solidify key areas
and events common in surgery.Readership: Candidates for the UK MRCS Part B examination in both the UK and overseas centres.
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Edited by Pradip K. Datta, Honorary Consultant Surgeon, Caithness General Hospital; and Wick Member of Council and College Tutor, Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, UK, Chris Bulstrode, Clinical Reader in Trauma and Orthopaedics, University of Oxford, UK, and Vasha Kaur, Surgical Trainee, London Deanery, UK Pradip Datta has worked in the NHS for 38 years and as a Consultant Surgeon in Wick for almost 25 years. He has been a Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (RCSEd) College Tutor since 1996, is a Member of the Council of RCSEd between 2000 and 2012 and was the former Honorary Secretary to the RCSEd from 2003 to 2007.
Vasha Kaur is a Surgical Trainee in the London Deanery, UK.
Chris Bulstrode has worked in Oxford for 23 years as a joint replacement surgeon then as a trauma surgeon. He specializes in teaching medical students at Oxford University. He is also an elected member of the Council of the Royal College of Surgeons Edinburgh and of the General Medical Council chairing the undergraduate board. He has recently returned from a 6-month tour of Afghanistan as a major in the Territorial Army, dealing with restructuring of health care services in Helmand Province. Contributors: Professor Anthony Angel BSc, PhD Former Professor of Physiology, University of Sheffield Examiner, Royal College of Surgeons of
Edinburgh
Professor Pawanindra Lal MS, MNAMS, DNB, FRCS (Ed & Glasg) Professor of Surgey, Maulana Azad Medical College, New Delhi, India Examiner, Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh
Mr Iain Nixon FRCS Ed (ENT and Head & Neck) Specialist Registrar, West of Scotland Rotation Clinical Research Fellow, Head & Neck Surgery Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York
Professor William F M Wallace BSc, MD, FRCP, FRCA, FCAI, FRCSEd Professor Emeritus of Applied Physiology, Queen's University, Belfast Examiner, Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh
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Part 1: Surgical skills and patient safety
Section 1: Peri-operative Care
1: Pre-operative assessment and preparation of the surgical patient
2: Anaesthetics
3: In the operating theatre
4: Principles of laparoscopic surgery and endoscopic procedures
5: Post-operative care of the surgical patient
6: Imaging in surgery
Section 2: Basic skills for the surgical trainee
7: Basic surgical skills and techniques
8: Incisions and wounds
9: Practical procedures
Section 3: Evidence-based surgical practice and professional skills
10: Clinical governance, patient safety and critical incidents
11: Consent, confidentiality and information management
12: Ethics, probity and medical negligence
Part 2: History-taking and communication skills
13: Tips for effective communication
14: History-taking stations
15: Dealing with difficult situations
16: Written communication
Part 3: Applied surgical sciences and critical care
Section 1: Applied surgical pathology
17: Microbiology and healthcare-associated infections
18: Carcinogenesis and neoplasia
19: Haemodynamic disorders and thrombosis
20: Trauma
21: Surgical disorders of the skin and subcutaneous tissue
Section 2: Applied surgical physiology and critical care
22: Basic cellular physiology
23: Assessing the critically ill surgical patient
24: Shock and haemorrhage
25: Sepsis and multi-organ failure
26: Respiratory system in critical care
27: Cardiovascular system in critical care
28: Renal system in critical care
29: Gastrointestinal system in critical care
30: The liver
31: Neurological system in critical care
32: Brain stem death and end of life care
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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