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MEMBERSHIP EXAMINATION

MRCEM

Your foundation in emergency medicine — structured guidance for every component of the RCEM membership pathway.

3 Components · Primary · Intermediate · OSCE · RCEM Curriculum Mapped
Overview

The MRCEM Pathway

The Membership of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (MRCEM) is the benchmark postgraduate qualification for emergency medicine trainees in the UK. Achieving MRCEM demonstrates competence across the breadth of acute and emergency presentations, underpinned by the RCEM 2021 curriculum.

The exam pathway comprises three sequential components: the MRCEM Primary (SBA), the MRCEM Intermediate (SBA), and the MRCEM OSCE. Candidates must pass each component before progressing to the next. The entire pathway typically takes 12–24 months to complete, depending on sitting frequency and preparation intensity.

MRCEM is a prerequisite for progression to higher specialty training (ST4+) and forms the foundation for the Fellowship (FRCEM) examination. The pass mark is set using Angoff standard-setting methodology, ensuring consistent standards across sittings.

Key Facts

Awarding bodyRoyal College of Emergency Medicine
Curriculum basisRCEM 2021 Curriculum
Components3 (SBA × 2, OSCE × 1)
EligibilityGMC-registered doctors in EM training or SAS grade
Typical timeline12–24 months
Standard-settingAngoff method
Exam Breakdown

Three Components of MRCEM

COMPONENT 1

MRCEM Primary (SBA)

The first hurdle — a single best answer paper testing basic sciences applied to emergency medicine.

FormatSingle Best Answer (SBA)
Questions180 questions
Duration3 hours
SittingsTwice yearly (March, September)
FocusAnatomy, physiology, pharmacology, pathology, microbiology, evidence-based medicine

What to expect

  • Questions test applied basic science — not pure recall
  • Clinical vignettes mapped to common ED presentations
  • Negative marking does not apply — answer every question
  • Pharmacology and anatomy are consistently high-yield domains
COMPONENT 2

MRCEM Intermediate (SBA)

Applied knowledge test examining clinical decision-making across the full emergency medicine curriculum.

FormatSingle Best Answer (SBA)
Questions150 questions
Duration3 hours
SittingsTwice yearly
FocusClinical management, investigation, diagnosis, NICE/RCEM guidelines

What to expect

  • Scenario-based questions reflecting real ED practice
  • Heavy emphasis on acute management and disposition decisions
  • NICE guidelines and RCEM best practice guidelines are tested directly
  • Paediatric emergencies form a significant proportion of questions
COMPONENT 3

MRCEM OSCE

Objective Structured Clinical Examination assessing clinical and communication competence across 16 stations.

FormatOSCE — 16 stations
Duration per station7 minutes + 1 minute reading
SittingsTwice yearly
DomainsClinical skills, communication, procedural, interpretation

Station types

  • Clinical assessment: focused history and examination
  • Communication: breaking bad news, consent, safety-netting
  • Procedural skills: suturing, joint aspiration, nerve blocks (simulated)
  • Data interpretation: ECG, ABG, imaging review
  • Resuscitation: structured approach to the deteriorating patient
Syllabus Mapping

RCEM Curriculum Domains

The MRCEM syllabus is mapped to the RCEM 2021 curriculum. The following domains represent the core knowledge areas tested across all three components.

  • Adult and paediatric basic and advanced life support (Resuscitation Council UK 2021 guidelines)
  • Recognition and management of the deteriorating patient
  • Cardiac arrest rhythms: VF/pVT, PEA, asystole
  • Reversible causes (4Hs and 4Ts) — systematic identification and correction
  • Post-resuscitation care: targeted temperature management, coronary angiography decisions
  • Anaphylaxis management per RCUK and NICE CG134
  • Sepsis recognition and management per NICE NG51 (Sepsis: recognition, diagnosis and early management)
  • Neonatal resuscitation principles
  • Primary and secondary survey per ATLS principles
  • C-spine immobilisation and clearance (NICE NG41 and Canadian C-Spine Rule)
  • Major haemorrhage protocols and massive transfusion
  • Thoracic trauma: pneumothorax, haemothorax, flail chest, cardiac tamponade
  • Abdominal trauma: FAST scan indications and interpretation
  • Pelvic fracture management and binder application
  • Head injury assessment: GCS, CT head criteria (NICE CG176), TBI management
  • Fracture recognition, reduction principles, and neurovascular assessment
  • Burns assessment: Lund-Browder chart, fluid resuscitation (Parkland formula), transfer criteria
  • Acute coronary syndromes: STEMI/NSTEMI pathways, troponin interpretation, NICE CG95
  • Acute heart failure management (NICE NG106)
  • Arrhythmia recognition and management: tachycardias and bradycardias per Resuscitation Council UK algorithms
  • Pulmonary embolism: risk stratification (Wells score, Geneva), investigation (CTPA/VQ), NICE NG158
  • Aortic dissection: Stanford classification, urgent management
  • Hypertensive emergencies
  • ECG interpretation: axis deviation, bundle branch blocks, ST/T changes, QTc prolongation
  • Acute asthma management: BTS/SIGN guideline, severity grading, escalation
  • COPD exacerbation: controlled oxygen, NIV indications, NICE NG115
  • Community-acquired pneumonia: CURB-65, antibiotic selection per NICE CG191
  • Pneumothorax: BTS guidelines, aspiration vs chest drain indications
  • Acute respiratory failure: type 1 vs type 2, ABG interpretation
  • Upper airway obstruction: foreign body, angioedema, epiglottitis
  • COVID-19 respiratory management principles
  • Stroke: FAST recognition, CT interpretation, thrombolysis criteria, NICE NG128
  • Status epilepticus: staged management per NICE CG137
  • Meningitis and encephalitis: lumbar puncture indications, empirical antibiotics
  • Headache red flags: subarachnoid haemorrhage (Ottawa SAH rule), raised ICP
  • Spinal cord compression: diagnosis and urgent management
  • Acute confusional state: delirium screening (4AT), reversible causes
  • Febrile child assessment: NICE NG143 (traffic light system)
  • Paediatric sepsis: recognition and escalation
  • Croup, bronchiolitis, and wheeze: NICE CG9 and NG9
  • Non-accidental injury: recognition patterns, safeguarding referral pathway
  • Paediatric resuscitation: weight estimation, drug doses, equipment sizing
  • The limping child: differential diagnosis and investigation pathway
  • Diabetic ketoacidosis in children: fluid management per BSPED guidelines
  • Paracetamol overdose: Rumack-Matthew nomogram, NAC protocol (NICE CKS)
  • Tricyclic antidepressant toxicity: ECG changes, sodium bicarbonate
  • Opioid overdose: naloxone dosing and monitoring
  • Carbon monoxide poisoning: diagnosis, COHb levels, referral for hyperbaric O₂
  • Alcohol withdrawal: CIWA scoring, benzodiazepine regimen
  • Hypothermia: grading, rewarming strategies, cardiac considerations
  • TOXBASE and NPIS as primary references
  • Mental Health Act 1983 (amended 2007): Section 2, 5(2), 136
  • Mental Capacity Act 2005: capacity assessment, best interests decisions
  • Risk assessment in self-harm and suicide: Manchester Self-Harm Rule, NICE CG133
  • Acute behavioural disturbance: de-escalation, rapid tranquilisation (NICE NG10)
  • Safeguarding adults and children: recognition, documentation, referral pathways
  • Domestic abuse screening in the ED
Core Topics

High-Yield Clinical Domains

Resuscitation

Adult and paediatric ALS per Resuscitation Council UK 2021. Cardiac arrest management, peri-arrest arrhythmias, post-ROSC care, and team leadership in the resuscitation room.

ALS PALS Post-ROSC Anaphylaxis

Major ED Presentations

Chest pain, breathlessness, abdominal pain, headache, syncope, and the undifferentiated unwell patient. Systematic approach to differential diagnosis and risk stratification using validated scores.

Chest pain Dyspnoea Acute abdomen Collapse

Procedures & Skills

Practical competence in core emergency procedures: chest drain insertion, joint aspiration, wound closure, regional anaesthesia, procedural sedation, and emergency airway management.

Chest drain Nerve blocks Suturing RSI principles

Guidelines & Evidence

NICE clinical guidelines, RCEM best practice guidelines, BTS guidelines, and Resuscitation Council UK algorithms. Understanding when and how to apply evidence-based protocols in time-pressured settings.

NICE RCEM BTS RCUK
Preparation Strategy

How to Prepare Effectively

Question Banks

Consistent, daily question practice is the single most effective strategy for the SBA components. Aim for 50–100 questions per day in the final 8 weeks before each sitting.

  • PassMedicine MRCEM: Comprehensive bank mapped to the RCEM curriculum with detailed explanations
  • BMJ OnExamination: High-quality questions with evidence-based rationales
  • RCEM Learning: Free official resources including sample questions and learning modules
  • Track your performance by domain — focus revision on consistently weak areas
  • Simulate exam conditions: timed blocks of 30 questions without interruption

OSCE Frameworks

The OSCE tests clinical competence under time pressure. Structured frameworks prevent disorganisation and ensure you cover mark-earning domains consistently.

  • History stations: Use a systematic framework — presenting complaint, HPC, systems review, PMH/DH/SH/FH, ICE (ideas, concerns, expectations)
  • Examination stations: Inspect, palpate, percuss, auscultate — always offer to complete the examination
  • Communication stations: Calgary-Cambridge model — establish rapport, gather information, explain, plan
  • Procedural stations: WHO checklist approach — indication, consent, equipment, technique, aftercare
  • Practise with peers and record yourself — review for filler words, missed domains, and time management

Revision Timeline

A structured timeline prevents last-minute cramming and ensures comprehensive curriculum coverage.

6 months before

Begin content review. Read through core textbooks (Tintinalli, Rosen). Start question bank — 20–30 questions daily. Identify weak domains early.

3 months before

Increase question volume to 50+ daily. Begin OSCE practice sessions weekly. Review NICE guidelines systematically. Start timed mock exams.

6 weeks before

Peak intensity. 80–100 questions daily. OSCE practice 2–3 times per week. Focus on weak areas identified from question bank analytics. Full mock OSCE circuits.

Final 2 weeks

Consolidation. Review marked/flagged questions. Revise high-yield summaries. One full timed mock exam under real conditions. Rest adequately before the exam.

High-Yield Notes

Essential Clinical Frameworks

Cardiac Arrest — ALS Algorithm

Shockable rhythms (VF/pVT): Defibrillate → 2 min CPR → reassess. Adrenaline 1mg IV after 3rd shock, then every 3–5 min. Amiodarone 300mg after 3rd shock, 150mg after 5th.

Non-shockable (PEA/Asystole): Adrenaline 1mg IV immediately, then every 3–5 min. Continue CPR cycles. Identify and treat reversible causes.

4Hs: Hypoxia, Hypovolaemia, Hypothermia, Hypo/Hyperkalaemia. 4Ts: Tension pneumothorax, Tamponade, Toxins, Thrombosis.

Source: Resuscitation Council UK 2021 ALS Guidelines

Sepsis — NEWS2 and Sepsis 6

Recognition: NEWS2 score ≥5 (or 3 in one parameter) triggers sepsis screening. Look for: infection source + organ dysfunction.

Sepsis 6 (within 1 hour):

Give 3: IV antibiotics, IV fluid challenge (500ml crystalloid), high-flow O₂ (target SpO₂ ≥94%).

Take 3: Blood cultures, lactate, urine output monitoring.

Red flags: Lactate >4 mmol/L, systolic BP <90, no response to fluid bolus → escalate to critical care.

Source: NICE NG51, UK Sepsis Trust, Resuscitation Council UK

Acute Coronary Syndromes

STEMI: 12-lead ECG within 10 minutes. If PCI available within 120 min → primary PCI. If not → thrombolysis within 30 min of diagnosis.

NSTEMI: Risk stratify with GRACE score. Dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin + ticagrelor per NICE TA236). Fondaparinux (unless high bleeding risk). Angiography within 72 hours for intermediate-high risk.

High-sensitivity troponin: Use 0/3h or 0/1h rule-out pathways per local protocol and ESC guidelines.

Source: NICE CG95, Resuscitation Council UK, ESC Guidelines

Major Trauma — <C>ABCDE

<C> Catastrophic haemorrhage: Direct pressure, tourniquets, haemostatic agents.

A — Airway: Jaw thrust (trauma), suction, adjuncts. Assume C-spine injury until cleared.

B — Breathing: Tension pneumothorax (needle/finger thoracostomy), massive haemothorax (chest drain), flail chest.

C — Circulation: 2 large-bore IV, crystalloid, activate major haemorrhage protocol (1:1:1 ratio). Pelvic binder if suspected fracture.

D — Disability: GCS, pupils, glucose, lateralising signs.

E — Exposure: Full exposure, log roll, temperature management.

Source: ATLS 10th Edition, RCEM Major Trauma Guidelines, NICE NG39
Exam Technique

Common Mistakes & How to Avoid Them

Running out of time in SBA papers

With 180 questions in 3 hours, you have exactly 1 minute per question. If a question takes more than 90 seconds, flag it and move on. Return to flagged questions at the end. Never leave blank answers.

Ignoring the OSCE reading time

The 1-minute reading time is critical. Use it to identify: the task (history/examination/procedure), the marking domains, and your opening line. Candidates who skip this step lose structure immediately.

Studying breadth without depth

Covering every topic superficially is less effective than mastering high-yield domains. Resuscitation, trauma, and paediatrics appear in every sitting. Know these cold.

Poor guideline recall under pressure

NICE and RCEM guidelines are tested directly. Learn the guideline numbers and key thresholds (e.g., NEWS2 escalation triggers, CT head criteria). Flashcards and spaced repetition are highly effective.

Neglecting communication skills

Communication stations carry equal marks to clinical stations. Practise breaking bad news, gaining consent, and safety-netting. Use structured models (SPIKES, Calgary-Cambridge) consistently.

Not practising under exam conditions

Timed mocks reveal weaknesses that untimed study does not. Complete at least two full timed SBA papers and one complete OSCE circuit before the real exam.