Showing posts with label mci screening test. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mci screening test. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

mci screening,BOOKS TO BUY,mbbs entrance exam

1. Anatomy
a. Dutta (I would recommend this as the basic text book)
b. Chaurasia (Easy for remembering the relations using simple diagrams)
c. Keith L. Moore (Is extremely helpful in learning hard topics like the sole, and Head & Neck.
d. Neuroanatomy (IB Singh > Dutta. Again, very useful if you can read topics like Hypothalamus, Cerebellum, blood supply to brain from both)
e. Embryology (IB Singh > Dutta. I found both useful and Dutta has great General Embryology discussion.)
f. SARP – (useful for Osteology, Arthrology)
g. Osteology and Histology – only for Reference

2. Physiology
a. Ganong (Read through Ganong and do the question on the back)
b. Guyton (Great reference book to have. CVS is excellent and CNS/Muscle & Nerve topics might provide some tough references)

3. Biochemistry
a. Harper (Read through the regular sections and try to go through the last 200 pages. Those topics have been regularly asked in the last 2 years of AIPGE and AIIMS)
b. Vasudevan and Sreekumari (Very useful if you find Biochemistry difficult)
c. Chaudhary (For those hard question references)

4. Pharmacology
a. Tripathi (Read through. Just about everything is important. Try to add your own points from other texts such as Harrison etc. into this)
b. Tumor SARP (Chemotherapeutic agents)
c. Harrison Charts (Adverse Reactions pages 431 onwards in 15th Edition)
d. Pharmacology SARP is useful.

5. Pathology
a. Robbins (almost read through. Must read topics are General Pathology, CVS, CNS, Kidney, Muscle and Nerve)
b. Harrison (for the final word in pathology)
6. Microbiology
a. Ananthanarayanan (read through and give special importance to Virology, Mycology)
b. SARP is extremely useful here.
c. Harrison (final reference, great charts on offer in the last 100 pages in Infectious Disease topic)

7. Forensic Medicine
a. Naryana Reddy (mainly for reference)
b. SARP (very useful, especially in Toxicology and Identification)

8. Preventive and Social Medicine
a. Park (Almost read through)
b. RxPG SPM Buster (is useful, but has a lot of mistakes)

9. Psychiatry
a. Neeraj Ahuja (read selectively with stress on Psychopharmacology and substance abuse)
b. SARP series SARP (Essential)
c. Sure Success SARP (It’s even better than the original!)

10. Anesthesia
a. Lee (A truly wonderful book. If you have the time read it selectively. It will improve your knowledge in many subjects.)
b. SARP Original
c. Sure Success SARP

11. Radiology
a. Sutton (only for reference)
b. SARP (essential)
c. Sure Success SARP (must-read)

12. Skin
a. Pavithran (very good book)
b. Harrison (Skin topics are very good)
c. SARP
d. Sure Success SARP

13. ENT
a. Dhingra (read selectively with importance to Larynx)
b. Sure Success ENT & Ophthalmology book is very useful

14. Ophthalmology
a. Khurana (must read)
b. Parson (for reference)
c. Sure Success ENT & Ophthalmology

15. Orthopedics
a. Maheshwari (for reading)
b. Natarajan (for a bit of reference)

16. Surgery
a. Bailey and Love (very useful to read but has a lot of contradictions within itself and with other text books
b. Surgery SARP (very useful)
c. Manipal Manual of Surgery
d. Das (both Clinical and Short Cases)

17. Medicine
a. Harrison (ultimate Bible)
b. CMDT (very useful and concise. Essential for the latest protocols in most subjects)

18. Pediatrics
a. OP Ghai (for selective reading. Don’t ever miss out on Metabolic diseases)
b. Nelson (for reference)
c. Pediatrics SARP (very informative)

19. Obstetrics
a. Dutta (another great book. Selective reading)
b. O&G Buster (is okay)

20. Gynecology
a. Shaw’s (Great book, selective reading with emphasis on Tumors)
b. O&G Buster (is okay)

mci screening test why students fail in first attempt,is mbbs medical studies so hard to do?

how can a student pass ??"
It's not the fault of the student if he fails, because the year ONLY
has 365' days.

Typical academic year for a student:

1. Sundays-52, Sundays in a year, you know Sundays are for rest. Days left 313.

2. Summer holidays-50 where weather is very hot and difficult to study. Days left 263.

3. 8 hours daily sleep- 130 days GONE. Days left 141.

4. 1 hour for daily playing- (good for health) means 15 days. Days left 126.

5. 2 hours daily for food & other delicacies (chewing properly & swallowing)-means 30days. Days left 96.

6. 1 hour for talking (man is a social animal)-means 15 days. Days left 81.

7. Exam days- per year at least 35 days. Days left 46.

8. Quarterly, Half yearly and festival (holidays)-40 days. Balance 6 days.

9. For sickness- at least 3 days. Remaining days=3.

10. Movies and functions - at least 2 days. 1 day left.

11. That 1 day is your birthday. How can you study on that day??????!!!!!!!!!!

Balance = 0

Friday, August 22, 2008

mci SCREENING TEST

MCI to remove cap on first MBBS and screening tests

Rita Dutta - Mumbai

There is good news for MBBS students as the Medical Council of India (MCI) has decided to remove the cap on the number of attempts on the first MBBS and screening tests.

A student appears for the first MBBS test after the first one-and-a-half years. The screening test along with the no-objection certificate (NOC) was introduced last year as a measure to check the flow of students migrating to the CIS medical colleges, which reportedly admit students who have failed to secure less than 50 per cent and did not have science as a subject in the twelfth standard. The number of attempts for the first MBBS and screening was earlier fixed at four and three respectively. The relaxation of the number of attempts was decided at the general body meeting of MCI held on March 25.

“The removal of the ceiling on the first MBBS attempts was triggered by the uproar created by the recent suicide of three medical students in Nashik. The students who failed to clear in the first MBBS exam after the fourth attempt were disallowed by the Maharashtra University of Health Sciences from making another attempt,” said an MCI official.

The MCI has been bombarded with requests from academicians and politicians alike to remove the restrictions from different quarters, “as it was felt that it was not reasonable to impose restrictions on the first attempt when there was none for the second and the final MBBS exams,” said the official.

‘‘The benefits of removal of the ceiling far outweigh the disadvantages. We deliberated that studying MBBS in the private medical colleges involves a lot of financial strain for the family and it was not fair to shut the door on a student after the fourth attempt,’’ the official said, adding, ‘‘The removal of the ceiling on attempts would also weed out corruption for students who were left at the mercy of examiners after the third attempt. It would also bring in uniformity as few colleges were allowing students to appear even after the fourth attempt."

"We found that out of the 15,000 students who seek admission in a medical college every year, not more than 50 fail in the first MBBS after the fourth attempt, said the official. According to experts, around 30 per cent fail in the first attempt, 20 per cent in second attempt, five per cent in third attempt and less than one per cent in fourth attempt.

The executive body decided to remove the cap on the screening test also. "It was unreasonable to remove restriction on students studying here and impose restrictions on foreign-returned doctors," said the official.

However, the decision has drawn flak from many experts. According to Dr Anant Mashankar, honorary assistant professor of radiology, K G Somaiya Medical College, "It would lead to deterioration of quality of medical education.” Dr G N Bhatia, vice president, Association of Medical Consultants, feels that the MCI should introduce a Continuing Medical Education (CME) course for doctors who have failed to clear in the second attempt, rather than allowing them to reappear for a number of times. Dr Vasant Shenoy, president, Indian Medical Association, Mumbai-West, avers," A doctor who cannot clear the screening test in three attempts is not fit to be a medical practitioner."

The MCI official dismisses this by saying, "A substandard doctor is better than a quack."