Search our site 
 
Advanced Search
 

Home | News | Exam dates | Contact us | About us | Testimonials |

 
Username: Password:   Forgot?
 

map
You are in Home >> Exams >> Syllabus: Primary, Final & FCARCSI

Irish FCARCSI Examination: a summary

Created: 28/7/2005
Updated: 7/10/2008

 

FCARCSI


Changes in the Examination for Fellowship of the Faculty (FFARCSI) came into place on 1 August 1996, in parallel with the two-part examination structure adopted by the Royal College of Anaesthetists, now called the Irish College of Anaesthetists. There is reciprocity between the RCA and the Irish College of Anaesthetists with regard to the examinations in London and Dublin subject to their regulations.

The T. Brophy Medal is awarded to the trainee with the highest marks in the Final Fellowship examination. The Examination is known now, since the College of Anaesthetists became autonomous, as the FCARCSI.

Irish College of Anaesthetists

The College of Anaesthetists RCSI Examination Regulations governs the content and conduct of the examination leading to the award of the Fellowship of the College of Anaesthetists RCSI. They specify the requirement, which must be satisfied before a candidate is eligible to apply to take the examination. They also specify the procedure to be followed in order to apply, limit the number of attempts and provide for guidance in the event of failure. They describe the procedure to making representations and provide sanctions for infringements.

Implementation

1. These regulations will come into force on 1st January 2005, and will be valid for 2 years.

Examinations

2. (a) The Examination for the Fellowship of the College of Anaesthetists will be in two parts, namely the Primary and Final Examinations.

(b) Normally there will be two sittings of each part of the Examination in each academic year starting on 1st January 2005. The Council may at any time decide subject to adequate notice, to adjust the number of sittings of either or both parts of the examination in any year.

3. (a) The Primary Examinations will consist of Multiple Choice Questions
(MCQ's), Oral and Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCE). Details of these are attached in Appendix 1.

(b) The Final Examination will consist of Written, (multiple choice, essays and short answer questions), Oral and Clinical sections. Details of these are found in Appendix 2.

Eligibility

4. Primary Examination

An individual is eligible to enter for the Primary Examination who:

(a) Has, or is eligible for, full or limited registration with the Irish Medical Council or the General Medical Council (UK).
(b) Has completed 12 months training in the Republic of Ireland or the United Kingdom in posts approved by the College of Anaesthetists, or the Royal College of Anaesthetists.
(c) Is registered with the College of Anaesthetists, or the Royal College of Anaesthetists, as a postgraduate trainee in Anaesthetics. Registration number will be requested on application form.
(d) Complies with the requirements of these regulations in respect of application procedures and other matters.

5. Final Examination

An individual is eligible to enter for the Final Examination leading to the Fellowship of the College of Anaesthetists who:

(a) Has passed, or is exempt from, the Primary Fellowship Examination (see regulation 6).
(b) Has, by a date not earlier than 5 years before the date of application to enter the examination, completed 30 months of training in the specialty of anaesthesia. The specified period of training shall have been completed in posts approved by the College of Anaesthetists RCSI, Ireland or the Royal College of Anaesthetists, United Kingdom. A period of up to 12 months may have been completed as an anaesthetic trainee in a recognised training programme overseas, to the satisfaction of the Examination Committee of the College of Anaesthetists, RCSI Ireland.
(c) Is registered with the College of Anaesthetists or the Royal College of Anaesthetists as a postgraduate trainee in Anaesthesia. Registration numbers will be requested on the application form.
(d) Complies with the requirements of these regulations in respect of application procedures and other matters.

6. Exemption

A candidate for the Final Fellowship examination shall be exempt from passing the Primary Examination and from such of the period of training prescribed in regulation 5 (b) who, within the 10 years preceeding the date of application.

(a) Has passed the Part II Examination of the College of Anaesthetists RCSI, or the Part II of the Royal College of Anaesthetists.

(b) Has obtained one of the following qualifications, any one of which shall also exempt the holder from the first 12 months of the 30 months training required by regulation 5 (b) provided that no candidate shall be entitled to more than one such exemption.

(i) The Fellowship of the Royal College of Anaesthetists.

(ii) The Fellowship of the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists.

(iii) The Fellowship of the College of Anaesthetists of South Africa.

(iv) The Fellowship in Anaesthesia of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.

(v) The Diplomate Certificate of the American Board of Anesthesiology.

(vi) The European Diploma in Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care of the European Society of Anaesthesiology.

(vii) The Fellowship in Anaesthesiology of the College of Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan since April 1998.

(viii) Overseas Qualifying Examination.



(c) Other degrees or qualifications as may be from time to time be approved by the Council of the College.

Application Procedures

7. Dates of Examinations shall be published in the Examinations Calendar of the College of Anaesthetists in Ireland and copies may be obtained from the Examination Office, College of Anaesthetists in Ireland, 22 Merrion Square North, Dublin 2, Ireland.

8. Application forms for admission to the Examinations may be obtained from the Examinations Office. Applications must reach the Examinations Office not before the conclusion of the previous examination and not after the published closing date for the relevant sitting.

9. Application for admission must be accompanied by the appropriate fee and include any certificates required, with the registration number given on the application form.

10. Fees payable for admission to each part shall be those fixed by College Council and published in the Examinations Calendar. Fees may be paid by Sterling or Euro cheque, made payable to the College of Anaesthetists RCSI and drawn on an Irish clearing bank; or alternatively paid by a Euro banker's draft, or credit card.

Referrals and Guidance

11. A candidate who is unsuccessful in an examination may, subject to the provisions of the regulations below, enter for the next or any subsequent sitting of that Examination.

For the purpose of this Regulation, guidance may consist of:

(i) Written communication with the candidate in which details of his/her performance may be divulged and discussed.

(ii) Attendance at an interview arranged by the Chairman of the Examinations Committee.


Representation and Appeals

12. A candidate, or any person on behalf of that candidate, wishing to make representations in respect of the conduct of an examination or to appeal against any result, must address such representation or appeal to the Chairman of the Examination Committee, in writing, before the closing date of the next sitting in that part. In no circumstances may such representations be addressed to an individual examiner. The College’s Examination Committee will consider representations and appeals. See Appendix 4.

Infringements

13. (a) Candidates are not permitted to bring any materials or information which may assist them (e.g. electronic recording devices, computers, mobile telephones) into the examinations. Failure to comply with these examination regulations may result in disqualification from the whole of that examination sitting.

(b) The College Council may refuse to admit to an examination or proceed with the examination of any candidate who infringes any of the regulations, or who is considered by presiding examiner to be guilty of behaviour which prejudices the proper conduct and management for the examination or who has previously been found guilty of such behaviour. If, in the opinion of the Council, any examination result has been secured by cheating, deception or fraud of any kind whatsoever, the Council may nullify the result of any qualifications resulting from it and withdraw any Diploma, Certificate or other award so obtained.

Appendix 1

Structure of the Primary Fellowship Examination

There are 4 sections:

(a) Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs) - 90 questions, 3 hours
This consists of approximately 30 questions in pharmacology, 30 questions in physiology and biochemistry, 20 questions in physics, clinical measurement, and 10 questions in clinical anaesthesia.

(b) Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) - This consists of 14 stations (with 2 rest stations) in approximately 2 hours. This may consist of stations in resuscitation, practical skills, anatomy including surface anatomy, history taking, physical examination, communication skills, interpretation of ECG, X-ray, biochemistry/haematology results, photographs, scans, charts, anaesthetic equipment, monitoring equipment, measuring equipment, clinical anaesthesia and statistics.

(c) Viva examination in Physiology - 25 minutes

(d) Viva examination in Pharmacology - 25 minutes

The viva’s will be structured. They will be conducted over a 25 minutes period with two examiners in each subject. Each viva will consist of 5 x 5 minute sections.

· A candidate in the Primary Examination who does not attain the required standard in the MCQ section will not be permitted to proceed with the remaining elements of the examination.

· Please note that negative marking is applied in the MCQ.

Appendix 1b

Marking System for the Primary Fellowship Examination

A new close marking system is used.

A - Outstanding, potential medal winner
B - Pass
C - Marginal Fail
D - Veto Fail

The minimum grades necessary to pass the examination are:

B, B, B, C

Any candidate who obtains a D in any part of the examination will be an outright fail.

Appendix 2

Structure of the Final Fellowship Examination

There are 5 sections:

(a) Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs) - 40 MCQ's in 90 minutes, comprising of questions on Anaesthesia, Pain Management, Intensive Care Medicine, General Medicine, Surgery and Anatomy related to Anaesthesia Practice.

(b) Essay and Short Answer Question (E&SAQ) paper (all are compulsory) - 3 hours on the principles and practice of Clinical Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine.

(c) Clinical Care Examination (conducted in designated hospitals). Following 30 minutes of examination including History taking, Physical Examination, Investigation and Provisional Diagnosis, the candidate is examined for the above and questioned on Clinical Anaesthesia for 30 minutes.

(d) Viva 1 - Clinical Anaesthesia and Pain Management - 25 minutes. A structured viva examination is held relating to the clinical material provided, and also on Clinical Anaesthesia and Pain Management unrelated to the clinical material.

(e) Viva 2 - Intensive Care and Clinical Science - 25 minutes. A structured viva examination is held relating to Intensive Care topics followed by application of Basic Sciences to Anaesthesia.

· A candidate in the Final examination who does not attain the required standard in one or both of the written sections will not be permitted to proceed with the remaining elements of the examination.

· Please note that negative marking is applied in the MCQ.

Appendix 2b

Marking System for the Final Fellowship Examination

The College uses a five-point close–marking system, the marks being:

7 Outstanding Performance

6 Pass

5 Fail (Borderline)

4 Fail

3 Veto (if a candidate fails to answer a compulsory question in the E&SAQ Paper; or attains an unacceptable standard in the either the Clinical section or Viva section)

Candidates with a mark = 4 in either the MCQ section or the Essay & Short Answer Questions section will not be invited to attend the Clinical or Viva elements.

The following marks are required to pass the Final FCA RCSI Examination

6, 6, 6, 6, 5

All examiners review performance of vetoed candidates before the final marks are awarded.

Negative marking is applied in the MCQ. One mark added for a correct answer; one subtracted for an incorrect answer; no change where ‘don’t know’ is marked.

Essay and Short Answer Question paper – ALL 6 questions must be attempted. A mark of 3 will be given for each whole question not attempted. 

Appendix 3

COA Overseas Qualifying Exam (OQE)

Exemption Exam for the FCARCSI

Introduction
The College of Anaesthetists Ireland wishes to offer an opportunity to candidates abroad to complete the FCARCSI and to avail of training opportunities in Anaesthesia in Ireland. To that end the College will conduct examinations abroad in locations that will be decided from time to time by College Council.

1. The examination conducted abroad shall be named the COA Overseas Qualifying Exam.
2. A candidate for this exam shall be a doctor in anaesthetic practice outside the EU who has completed 12 months anaesthetic training in overseas training posts inspected and approved by the COA.
4. The examination shall be conducted in whole or in part in centres abroad. College Council and Examinations Committee shall approve its timing, format and location.
5. The exam shall consist of written MCQs in physiology pharmacology and clinical anaesthesia physics and clinical measurement.
6. There shall be a viva and OSCE component to the examination.

Candidates who are successful at the COA Overseas Qualifying exam and having completed the necessary registration educational and training requirements for the final FCARCSI examination, as specified from time to time in the registration and examination regulations may be exempted from the Primary FCA Examination and permitted to sit the Final FCARCSI Examination.

Conduct of the OQE

Applications fro the OQE will be on the approved application form which can be obtained from the Examinations Office, College of Anaesthetists, 22 Merrion Square North, Dublin2, Ireland. All specified supporting documentation should accompany an application. Regulations regarding the conduct of the examinations and penalties incurred are the same as for the Primary and Final Fellowship examinations.

Appendix 3b

Structure of the Overseas Qualifying Examination

There are 4 sections:

(a) Multiple choice questions (MCQ) - 90 questions, 3 hours
This consists of approximately 30 questions in pharmacology, 30 questions in physiology and biochemistry, 20 questions in physics, clinical measurement, and 10 questions in clinical anaesthesia.

(b) Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) - This consists of 14 stations (with 2 rest stations) in approximately 2 hours. This may consist of stations in resuscitation, practical skills, anatomy including surface anatomy, history taking, physical examination, communication skills, interpretation of ECG, X-ray, biochemistry/haematology results, photographs, scans, charts, anaesthetic equipment, monitoring equipment, measuring equipment, clinical anaesthesia and statistics.

(c) Viva 1 Examination in Physiology - 25 minutes

(d) Viva2 Examination in Pharmacology - 25 minutes

The vivas will be structured. They will be conducted over a 25 minutes period with two examiners in each subject. Each viva will consist of 5 x 5 minute sections.

· A candidate in the Primary Examination who does not attain the required standard in the MCQ will not be permitted to proceed with the remaining elements of the examination.

Please note that negative marking applies in the MCQ.

Appendix 3c

Marking System for the Overseas Qualifying Exam

A new close marking system is used.

A - Outstanding, potential medal winner
B - Pass
C - Marginal Fail
D - Veto Fail

The minimum grades necessary to pass the examination are:

B, B, B, C

Any candidate who obtains a D in any part of the examination will be an outright fail.


Click for top Application forms for examinations can be downloaded from here:


 Revised Exam Regulations 11 May 2005.doc
 Application information.doc
 Primary FCA Application Form.doc
 Final FCA Application Form.doc


Examinations Department
College of Anaesthetists RCSI
22 Merrion Square North
Dublin 2
Ireland
Examinations Telephone: 00 353 1 6130001
Examinations Fax: 00 353 1 6614374
Examinations Email: mharvey@coa.ie or bconneely@coa.ie  

ArticleDate:20050728
SiteSection: Article
 
   
    
                                            



Login Status  

You are not currently logged in.
UK/Ireland Registration
Overseas Registration

  Forgot your password?








 
All rights reserved © 2010. Designed by AnaesthesiaUK.

We subscribe to the HON Code principles. 
{Site map} {Site disclaimer} {Privacy Policy} {Terms and conditions}

This site is developed in the latest microsoft programming language

vp