MCQ Examples

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About Course

Dr. Cezar Jaime Morgado Ortiz, MD, MBA

AMC MCQ 1 Passer

Former Amex Student Batch 11

Adult Medicine

  • Cardiovascular I & II
  • Respiratory I & II
  • Endocrinology I & II
  • Renal & Electrolytes I & II
  • Neurology I & II
Total duration: 15 hrs 22 min

Dr. Agustin Baes Corro III, RN, MD

AMC MCQ 1 Passer

Former Amex Student Batch 43

Adult Medicine

  • Gastroenterology I & II
  • Hepatology
  • Infectious Disease I & II
  • Hematology & Oncology
  • Rheumatology & Dermatology
  • General Topics
Total duration: 5 hrs 44 min

Dr. Agustin Baes Corro III, RN, MD

AMC MCQ 1 Passer

Former Amex Student Batch 43

Women’s Health

  • Antenatal Care I & II
  • Obstetric Complications I & II
  • Labor & Delivery
  • Postpartum & Lactation
  • Gynecology I & II
Total duration: 10 hrs 35 min

Dr. Karine Camille H. Joson, MD, DSBPP

AMC MCQ 1 and Clinic Exam passer

Former Medical Officer Lyell McEwin Hospital Elizabeth Vale South
Australia

Mental Health

  • Mood Disorders I & II
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Psychotic Disorders
  • Substance Use Disorders
  • Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
  • Psychiatric Emergencies
  • Legal and Ethical Psychiatry
Total duration: 4 hrs 13 min

Dr. Karine Camille H. Joson, MD, DSBPP

AMC MCQ 1 and Clinic Exam passer

Former Medical Officer Lyell McEwin Hospital Elizabeth Vale South
Australia

Ethics And Law

  • Ethics And Law
Total duration: 30 min

Dr. William Jayson Portillo Chan, MD

AMC MCQ 1

Current Resident Medical Officer, New South Wales

Former AMEX student Batch 36

Child Health

  • Neonatology I & II
  • Growth & Development
  • Respiratory Disorders
  • GI & Renal Disorders
  • Pediatric Infections
  • Pediatric Neurology & Emergencies
  • Immunization & Preventive Care
Total duration: 1 hr 44 min

Dr. William Jayson Portillo Chan, MD

AMC MCQ 1

Current Resident Medical Officer, New South Wales

Former AMEX student Batch 36

Adult Surgery

  • Surgical Principles
  • Abdominal Surgery I & II
  • Hepato Biliary Surgery
  • Breast & Endocrine Surgery
  • Trauma I & II
  • Orthopedic Surgery
  • Vascular Surgery
  • Urologic Surgery
  • ENT & Maxillofacial
  • Surgical Oncology
Total duration: 1 hr 55 min

Dr. William Jayson Portillo Chan, MD

Community Health

  • Epidemiology
  • Public Health
  • Health Systems
  • Aboriginal & Refugee Health
  • Occupational & Environmental Health
Total duration: 1 hr 32 min

Dr. Cezar Jaime Morgado Ortiz, MD, MBA

AMC MCQ 1

Current Resident Medical Officer, New South Wales

Former AMEX student Batch 36

Adult Medicine

  • Cardiovascular I & II
  • Respiratory I & II
  • Endocrinology I & II
  • Renal & Electrolytes I & II
  • Neurology I & II
Total duration: 15 hrs 22 min

 

As part of your preparation, we have released a list of recently tested themes from the AMC MCQ, including topics reported in the November 2025 exam.

The goal of sharing these themes early is to help you train your focus and to recognise what the AMC is currently emphasising and to study with intention, not guesswork. As you move deeper into the review program, we will continue releasing these test analyses so you can identify recurring question patterns, avoid common traps, and approach each module with greater confidence and clarity.

Use these themes as a lens while studying: they are not shortcuts, but tools to help you study smarter and prepare more strategically for the exam.

Adult Medicine

1. Heart Failure (HFrEF): disease-modifying therapy

Competency: Distinguishing mortality-reducing medications (ACEi/ARB/ARNI, beta blockers, MRAs) from purely symptomatic treatments (e.g. diuretics).

2. Hypertension pharmacotherapy (with comorbidities)

Competency: Choosing appropriate first-line or add-on antihypertensives based on diabetes, CKD, age, and cardiovascular risk.

3. Lung cancer: epidemiology and “most common type”

Competency: Broad recognition of histological patterns and population prevalence rather than detailed oncology staging.

4. Iron deficiency anaemia (adult vs child patterns overlap)

Competency: Correct interpretation of iron studies and differentiating IDA from anaemia of chronic disease.

5. Osteoporosis risk factors and fragility fractures (present but low signal)

Competency: Identifying major risk factors and when secondary causes should be considered.

Adult Surgery

1. Facial/parotid vs dental pain differentiation (weak but recurrent)

Competency: Anatomical localisation, red-flag recognition, and appropriate referral pathways rather than definitive surgical management.

2. Post-procedural complication recognition (implicit)

Competency: Early identification of complications that require escalation rather than watchful waiting.

(Note: Adult Surgery signals were relatively sparse in this recall set, which is itself a useful insight.)

 

Women’s Health

1. Cervical screening abnormalities (HPV/LSIL follow-up)

Competency: Applying National Cervical Screening Program pathways correctly and safely.

2. Emergency contraception selection

Competency: Choosing the most effective EC based on timing, cycle, and patient suitability (pill vs copper IUD).

Mental Health

1. Behavioural and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia (BPSD)

Competency: Safe prescribing, regular review, deprescribing principles, and risk–benefit reasoning with antipsychotics.

(Note: Mental health questions here test risk management and review discipline, not DSM memorisation.)

 

Child Health

1. Iron deficiency anaemia in children

Competency: Diet-related risk assessment, correct iron study interpretation, and age-appropriate management.

2. Common childhood skin conditions (warts)

Competency: Knowing benign natural history, first-line management, and avoiding overtreatment.

Community Health

1. Screening test interpretation (PPV, sensitivity/specificity)

Competency: 2×2 table literacy and applying screening statistics to population health decisions.

2. Genetic carrier screening and counselling (autosomal recessive)

Competency: Risk calculation, clear patient explanation, and avoiding deterministic language.

3. Vaccination-preventable disease complications (e.g. shingles → PHN)

Competency: Prognostic counselling and preventive framing rather than acute treatment alone.

4. Intimate partner violence risk factors (weak/implicit)

Competency: Social risk awareness without stereotyping; knowing when to screen and escalate.

Ethics

  1. Consent, documentation, and risk disclosure in vulnerable populations (embedded rather than explicit) Competency: Ethical prescribing, informed consent, proportionality of harm vs benefit, especially in geriatrics and mental health contexts.
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