Hema Here!
Today's Registrars are Tomorrow's GPs.
Just For You & Your Success in CSA!
Personal Message From Our Beloved RCGP Chair, Professor Clare Gerada!
The Clinical Skills Assessment (CSA) is a turning point on the path to becoming a General Practitioner.
It takes us away from theory, books and lecture halls and puts us through our paces with patients in realistic consultation situations.
You will do 13 simulated consultations, each case linked to learning outcomes from the MRCGP curriculum and designed to present you with a variety of the types of patients and issues that GPs experience – patients of different genders and ages, presenting with health and other issues of varying degrees of complexity and difficulty; in the surgery, in a home visit and over the phone.
While they are simulated consultations, they are designed to closely resemble the sorts of real-life consultations that GPs experience every day of their working lives – which is why the CSA is so important.
It looks at the emerging GP as a whole, including how you handle the personal side of interaction with your patients, and how they react to you.
The CSA tests your data-gathering, technical and assessment skills, clinical management skills and interpersonal skills.
Can you communicate effectively with patients?
How do you apply what you’ve learned effectively and efficiently within a time limit?
Can you make a diagnosis during a consultation with a patient and resolve management issues in a way that the patient can deal with?
You will have ten minutes for each consultation.
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Professor Clare Gerada
Chair, RCGP.
Hi Friend!
Me Again!
Me Again!
I thank our beloved Professor Dr Gerada on behalf of all of you for her beautiful message highlighting all the sensitive and vital points of our CSA Exam Preparation.
Today's Registrars are tomorrow's GPs.
The quality of education we receive is vitally important to the successful future of General Practice.
As Professor Gerada says, General Practice will never be an exact science.
It will always depend on enthusiastic teachers and ambitious registrars who are really hungry for new knowledge and skills.
That's all my friend!
Today's Registrars are tomorrow's GPs.
The quality of education we receive is vitally important to the successful future of General Practice.
As Professor Gerada says, General Practice will never be an exact science.
It will always depend on enthusiastic teachers and ambitious registrars who are really hungry for new knowledge and skills.
That's all my friend!
Let us kick start our practice!
To Your Success!
Hema xoxo.
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