Psychiatric Bulletin (2006) 30: 154. doi: 10.1192/pb.30.4.154
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2006) 30: 154
© 2006 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
MRCPsych examination - too expensive?
Jon van Niekerk, Senior House Officer
Royal Bolton Hospital, Bolton BL4 0JR, e-mail:
jjvanniekerk{at}doctors.net.uk
Few topics will engage senior house officers (SHOs) in such animated
discussions as the MRCPsych exams. I read with interest the comments made by
Dr Finlayson regarding the high pass mark for the MRCPsych part I exam
(Psychiatric Bulletin, January 2006, 30, 35). Although I found
the exam stressful, the standard was comparable to that of the last 10 years
(part of the exam preparation involves working through past papers).
The horror is the cost of the exams given that under the new
European Working Time Directive most SHOs have seen their salaries shrink over
the last 2 years. The added cost of exam-orientated courses run by private
companies and books has made this truly expensive. Long gone are the days when
Band 3 SHOs could afford all these.
I understand that to maintain high standards and quality the College needs
to spend accordingly. The problem is that the MRCPsych courses run by
universities are not sufficiently focused. This inevitably means having to pay
for a course that runs the total cost way beyond £1000 per exam. With
this kind of pressure a lot of SHOs cant afford to fail.
I am already dreading my part II exam - not because of the standard of the
exam but I dont know how I will be able to pay the £593 cost on a
1B salary. With the modernising process underway, is the MRCPsych going to be
a luxury that future SHOs will not be able to afford?