Fellowship
of the College of Physicians and Surgeons (FCPS). College of
Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan is a firm responsible for the
registration of Postgraduate Doctors of Pakistan. It makes rules,
enrolls doctors and conducts exams for the Post graduation in Pakistan.
Currently, CPSP is registering for FCPSI, II and MCPS. CPSP also
enrolls foreign qualified doctors. USA medical board, uk medical board,
postgraduate medical degree, undergraduate medical degree.
The CPSP currently allows FCPS in the following fields:
Anatomy | Anesthesiology | ||
Biochemistry | Cardiac Surgery | ||
Cardio-thoracic Anesthesiology | Cardiology | ||
Chemical pathology | Community Medicine | ||
Critical Care Medicine | Dermatology | ||
Diagnostic Radiology | Endocrinology | ||
Family Medicine | Forensic Medicine | ||
Gastroenterology | General Surgery | ||
Haematology | Histopathology | ||
Immunology | Infectious Diseases | ||
Medical Oncology | Medicine | ||
Microbiology | Neonatal Paediatrics | ||
Nephrology | Neurology | ||
Neurosurgery | Nuclear Medicine | ||
Obstetrics and Gynaecology | Operative Dentistry | ||
Ophthalmology | Oral Surgery | ||
Orthodontics | Orthopedic Surgery | ||
Otorhinolaryngology (ENT) | Paediatric Cardiology | ||
Paediatric Surgery | Paediatrics | ||
Pharmacology | Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation | ||
Physiology | Plastic Surgery | ||
Prosthodontics | Psychiatry | ||
Pulmonology | Radiotherapy | ||
Rheumatology | Thoracic Surgery | ||
Urology | Virology | ||
Vitreo Retinal Ophthalmology |
Regardless of the specialty, the FCPS exams consist of two parts: the FCPS-I and the FCPS-II.
The
FCPS-I exam, in all the specialties tests knowledge in the basic
sciences. It consists of 2 papers, each of 3 hrs. duration which take
place same day simultaneously. The exam focuses on those sections of
basic sciences that are relevant to its specialty. For example the
FCPS-I exam for Gynecology and Obstetrics will focus more on the Pelvis
and Perineum in its questions of gross anatomy while the FCPS-I exam
for ENT will focus on Head and Neck in its anatomy questions.
Similarly, the FCPS-I contains questions from the other basic sciences
(besides anatomy) that are relevant to its own field besides containing
general questions relevant to all specialties.
There
is no negative marking in this exam of 100 questions - however the
pass rate is low, ranging from 8-30%. This is because the passing
margin is set quite high at approximately 80%, which means a candidate
cannot afford to get more than 15-20 questions wrong.
The subjects tested in the FCPS-I exam are:
- Anatomy (Gross, Histology, Embryology, Neuro-anatomy).
- Physiology.
- Pharmacology.
- General and Special Pathology (Part of special pathology).
- Microbiology.
- Community Medicine (not a major subject, unless the specialty itself is Community Medicine).
Specialty
Related subject: Although clinical sciences are not included in the
FCPS-I exam, reading a specialty related book would help integrate the
relevant basic sciences information. For example, reading an ENT book
for FCPS-I ENT exam would most definitely be of some benefit.
The
FCPS-I exam is held 3 times a year. The dates for the exams are not
the same every year, but approximately in the time-periods mentioned
below.
- February/March.
- June/July.
- October/November.
In
order to take the FCPS exam, the application form must reach
CPSP two months before the exam date itself. So if a candidate wants to
give the exam in February/March, the exam application must be in the
CPSP offices in November / December. With the application form
candidate must submit his House Job Experience Certificate and PMDC full
registration. Those who have not finished theirs house job and do not
have elevated their provisional registration to a full registration are
not eligible to sit in the examination, so you may lose a chance to
avail FCPS Part I attempt, if your house job session is delayed.
This
means that the candidate cannot appear in the February/March FCPS-I
exam and he has to wait for 5 months till the June/July attempt. CPSP
has made another provision that if you have passed your FCPS in later
time and you were working in a teaching hospital in a capacity of a PG
student, that training will be counted towards your FCPS requirement up
to maximum of one year, provided you are working under Registered CPSP
Supervisor.
It
is suggested that to save time, candidates must plan their FCPS part I
according to their house job completion & eligibility to appear in
the exam, and they must apply for some PG / MO post under CPSP
supervisor, so that the time before the examination is utilized in the
best possible way.
After passing:
you will apply for a Post Graduate Trainee post in CPSP recognized
hospital. It must be mentioned here that not all PGs are awarded the
post. Every province in Pakistan has a fixed number of PG posts which
it can give and if the number of applicants exceeds the number of PG
positions available then some will be left out. Such applicants
thereafter can either join the PG training as Honorary (i.e. without
pay) or can apply for non-training jobs in private or government
hospitals as Medical Officers
Components of FCPS training :
After
you have secured an FCPS training post, you will begin your duties. It
is generally acknowledged that the workload for PGs is very demanding,
more so perhaps than for junior doctors in the US and UK. In many
hospitals, PGs are given a lot responsibility for patient care and
management – with these responsibilities increasing as the PG moves
forward in his training.
During
the course of training, the medical PGs must take 3 mandatory
workshops while the surgical ones must take 4. These workshops have to
be taken within the first 18 months of PG-ship:
- Computer and Internet Skills.
Lasts for 5 days and imparts basic knowledge of how to use computers
and the internet. For those who feel they already have such skills,
there is an equivalence test one can pass to attain a certificate
attesting to the fact.
- Research Methodology, Biostatistics, Dissertation Writing.
Lasts for 5 days and gives an intensive course on how to conduct
research, how to interpret the data from such research and how to
incorporate these skills in a Dissertation (see below).
- Communication Skills. A 3 day course on effective communication techniques in presentations, workshops and seminars.
These
three workshops are mandatory for all PGs regardless of their
specialty and must be taken within the first 18 months of training.
For the PGs in surgery, an additional 3 day workshop on Basic Surgical Skills is also mandatory – also to be taken within the first 18 months of PG-ship.
These
workshops cost Rs. 8,500 each except for the Computer and Internet
Skills workshop which costs Rs. 7,500. They are held several times a
year.
The Dissertation
To quote the FCPS Dissertation Instruction Manual, issued by the CPSP.
“Submission of Synopsis/Protocol on a chosen topic, its approval from Research and Training Monitoring Cell (RTMC), CPSP, and preparing a dissertation, acceptable to the College, is mandatory for all candidates aspiring to appear in the FCPS II theory, clinical and oral examinations. In doing so, the CPSP aims at:
- Cultivating an inquiring mind in its potential specialists.
- Encouraging in-depth studies related to common health problems afflicting our people.
- Generating scientific data in various medical and allied fields.”
Basically,
the dissertation is an original work of research that is carefully
preparing over the course of FCPS training and must be submitted at
least 9 months before the date the trainee wishes to appear in the
FCPS-II exam.
Before
writing dissertation, candidate apply to the CPSP for formal
approval of topic of his / her dissertation, this application with
details that how that dissertation work will be carried out is called
as synopsis. So approval of synopsis is first step towards dissertation writing.
The Intermediate Module (IM)
Recently,
CPSP has decided that all candidates (fresh and repeaters) must have
passed the Intermediate Module examination as one of the mandatory
eligibility requirements for appearing in FCPS-II examination in
September 2007 and onwards in the subjects listed below
SUBJECT OF FCPS-II
|
SUBJECT OF INTERMEIATE MODULE EXAMINATION
|
Anaesthesiology | Anaesthesiology |
Diagnostic Radiology | Diagnostic Radiology |
Obstetrics & Gynaecology | Obstetrics & Gynaecology |
Ophthalmology | Ophthalmology |
Paediatrics | Paediatrics |
Psychiatry | Psychiatry |
Internal Medicine | Medicine |
General Surgery | Surgery |
The
condition of passing the Intermediate Module examination one year
before appearing in FCPS-II examination has been withdrawn. Thus, if
all other requirements have been completed, candidates can appear in
FCPS-II examination any time after passing the Intermediate Module
examination.
The
Intermediate Module Examinations in Medicine & Surgery are already
being held and they will continue. For all other subjects listed
above, the first Intermediated Module Examination will be held in March 2006.
Those FCPS – II candidates who have passed MCPS examination in the
relevant subject earlier, will be exempted from Intermediate Module
Examination.
The
candidates who pass this examination will be issued a certificate of
passing Intermediate Module examination. Such candidates will also be
issued MCPS Diploma after they have completed all requirements for
appearing in final FCPS-II examination and have appeared in this
examination once.
FCPS PART II:
This
exam has two components, a paper exam and a clinical/oral exam. The
FCPS-II paper exam consists of 100 MCQ questions while the
clinical/oral exam is held with the cooperation of real patients. When
presented with a patient, the candidate will have to take history,
conduct the clinical examination, and propose a management plan. In the
oral component of this part of the exam, the candidate will be
thoroughly tested for in-depth knowledge of his specialty.
The
oral exam is divided into 2 parts, the Long Case and the TOACS (Task
Oriented Assessment of Clinical Skills). Candidates must pass TOACS so
that they can move to long case portion.
The
FCPS-II is not considered to be an easy exam. The pass rate is low and
it is not uncommon for doctors to take it more than once before they
pass. After passing however, the FCPS period of training is officially
over and the doctor is awarded the highly regarded FCPS degree, and
qualified as a specialist in that field.
THE COST FOR FCPS
By
far, entering the FCPS program is the most cost-effective of all the
options mentioned in this manual. The major costs involved are:
FCPS-I Exam Fee | Rs. 9,000 |
Registration Fee as a FCPS Trainee | Rs. 6,500 |
Workshops | Rs. 25,000 - 35000 |
Dissertation | Rs. 1,000 - 1500* |
FCPS-II Exam Fee | Rs. 9,000 |
The
dissertation costs range from 1,000 to 15,000 depending mostly on
whether or not you employ the services of a computer professional who
will type and arrange the format of your document. If you are skilled
at using a word processor and can prepare the document yourself, the
cost of preparing the dissertation will be correspondingly lower.
Assuming
that the exams are passed in the first attempt (which is not the case
for the majority of candidates), the costs range from Rs. 49,500 to Rs.
72,000. This is hardly 10% of the costs entailed in the entire USMLE
and UK pathways.
For Further details please visit the official CPSP Site www.cpsp.edu.pk.
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