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amc cat mcq: the recall-based study system

a structured study system for the australian medical council cat mcq: murtagh-anchored reasoning, q-bank execution, and the error-correction loop for imgs.

The Bottom Line

  • The AMC CAT MCQ is a <strong>150-question, single-sitting, computer-adaptive test</strong>.
  • Anchor your study to <strong>Australian clinical context</strong>: Murtagh's General Practice, AMH, and Australian emergency priorities.
  • The system: <strong>tight resource stack + timed Q-bank execution + systematic error correction</strong>.
The AMC CAT MCQ is the knowledge gate for Standard Pathway IMGs in Australia. It is a volume-and-precision exam: 150 questions in one sitting, computer-adaptive (difficulty adjusts based on your performance). The content covers the full breadth of medicine with an Australian primary care and emergency medicine emphasis. Your preparation must be efficient, Australian-contextualised, and retrieval-focused.
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Step 1 — Set up a 12–16 week plan

Weeks 1–2: baseline test + error log setup + resource selection. Weeks 3–10: daily timed Q-bank blocks + review + Murtagh index building. Weeks 11–14: mixed sets + weak-area sprints + full-length simulations. Final 1–2 weeks: error log consolidation + light review + rest. Book the exam before you start studying — a date creates urgency.
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Step 2 — Build your core resource stack (keep it tight)

Primary engine: a dedicated AMC Q-bank (Amedex, ACE QBank, or AMC-specific question sets). Reference: John Murtagh's General Practice (the most cited AMC preparation text — Australian primary care reasoning), Australian Medicines Handbook (AMH) for therapeutics, and a concise emergency medicine reference. Everything else is optional. Three resources, used well, beats eight resources used superficially.
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Step 3 — Build a 'Murtagh Index' (the high-frequency presentation map)

Create a shortlist of the 30–40 most common presentations in Australian primary care: chest pain, shortness of breath, abdominal pain, headache, fever, back pain, dizziness, rash, depression/anxiety, diabetes, hypertension, cough, joint pain, urinary symptoms. For each, know: red flags, key differentials, first-line investigations, and Australian management (including when to refer). Cross-link these to your Q-bank errors.
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Step 4 — Q-bank method (daily)

Do timed blocks (40–50 questions). After each block: review every question (including correct ones where you guessed). For each miss: (a) the correct rule, (b) the trap you fell into, (c) the trigger phrase you will recognise next time. Store in an error log. Review the error log every 3 days.
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Step 5 — Full-length simulations (at least 2)

Do two full 150-question mocks under strict exam timing. After each: theme-level error analysis, not question-by-question review. If your score fluctuates by more than 10% between mocks, your knowledge is inconsistent — target the unstable topics specifically.
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Step 6 — Australian clinical context matters

Some management decisions differ from UK/US standards: screening recommendations, antibiotic choices, referral thresholds, and prescribing conventions follow Australian guidelines. Use Therapeutic Guidelines (eTG) or AMH as your prescribing reference, not BNF or US sources. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health is testable content — understand cultural safety and common health priorities.

Computer-adaptive testing (CAT) — what it means for you

The AMC CAT adjusts question difficulty based on your performance. If you get questions right, the next ones get harder. If you get them wrong, they get easier. This means: don't panic if questions feel hard — it may mean you are performing well. Focus on each question individually without trying to gauge your performance mid-exam.

The 'infinite prep' trap

Many AMC candidates delay the exam for months or years, convinced they are 'not ready yet'. If your practice scores are consistently in the passing range, book the exam. Diminishing returns set in after 14–16 weeks of dedicated preparation. Perfectionism costs more time than it gains marks.
  • Exam booked before starting dedicated preparation.
  • Core stack: Q-bank + Murtagh's + AMH (no more than 3 primary resources).
  • Murtagh Index built for 30–40 high-frequency presentations.
  • Daily timed Q-bank blocks with error log.
  • Error log reviewed every 3 days.
  • At least 2 full-length 150-question mocks under exam timing.
  • Australian clinical context verified for management decisions.
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SourceAMC — CAT MCQ Examination (official)
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SourceAMC — MCQ Examination Specifications (PDF)
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