Step 3 builds on Step 2 CK knowledge. Six weeks is realistic because you are not learning medicine from scratch — you are reactivating and extending existing knowledge plus mastering the CCS simulation component that is unique to Step 3.
Weeks 1-2: Foundation + CCS Introduction
Review high-yield Step 3-specific topics: biostatistics/epidemiology (more heavily weighted than Step 2 CK), ethics and medicolegal (informed consent, capacity, advance directives, end-of-life), patient safety and quality improvement. Begin CCS case practice — learn the software interface and the ordering workflow. The 10 most common CCS presentations (chest pain, SOB, abdominal pain, AMS, headache, fever, pregnancy complications, paediatric emergencies, psychiatric emergencies, trauma) each have a management algorithm you need to master. Do 20-30 MCQs daily alongside CCS practice.
Weeks 3-4: Ramp Up
Increase to 40 questions daily. Focus on outpatient management — Step 3 is more outpatient-weighted than Step 2 CK (chronic disease management: diabetes per ADA, hypertension per JNC, dyslipidaemia per AHA/ACC, asthma per NAEPP). Continue CCS practice — aim for 2-3 cases daily. iatroX adaptive drills: 15-minute mobile sessions targeting your weakest clinical areas.
Weeks 5-6: Performance
Full practice exams. Intensive CCS drilling — the CCS component can meaningfully affect your score. Weak-area review via adaptive mode. Final week: light review, no new material, rest.
Studying During Residency
Post-call days: sleep first, then 2-3 hours of focused study. Pre-shift mornings: 30-minute adaptive drill. Commute: iatroX mobile 15-question sessions. Off days: 3-4 hours of timed blocks + CCS practice. Do not sacrifice sleep for study — sleep consolidates memory more effectively than an extra study hour.
