How to revise effectively with passmap
1. Use the Condition Notes as Your Core Map
Each condition note is:
NICE-aligned
PARA-exam optimised
Structured with mnemonics, visuals, and red flags
Tip: Start each session by skimming 2–3 notes with active recall (hide the content and try to recall the mnemonic or CXR findings before revealing).
2. Anchor Knowledge with Mnemonics
Our notes use logical, intuitive mnemonics to help you retain:
Risk factors
Symptoms
CXR findings
Investigations
Management plans
Strategy:
Say them aloud
Write them down from memory
Use them to create flashcards or teach someone else
3. Focus on PARA Exam Priorities
Our content matches the UK PA national curriculum, especially conditions commonly tested in:
OSCEs
Single best answer (SBA) written exams
Prioritise:
Emergency conditions
Clinical interpretation
NICE treatment steps (especially recent updates)
4. Master Clinical Interpretation
PassMap supports core interpretation domains:
Chest X-rays and common imaging signs
ECG interpretation (AF, STEMI, PE, etc.)
Blood results, scoring systems (CURB65, Wells, GRACE)
Tip: Link interpretation back to diagnosis and immediate action. Think like a PA.
5. Use Active Recall + Spaced Repetition
We are developing quizzes, SBAs and mock OSCE checklists, but you can start now by:
Hiding content and recalling from headings
Turning mnemonics into mock questions
Reviewing topics at spaced intervals (1 day, 3 days, 1 week)
6. Build a High-Yield Weekly Routine
The PARA exam covers a large volume of conditions. To revise effectively, a good student should aim to cover:
3–5 full conditions per day (depending on intensity)
All systems weekly: Cardiovascular, Respiratory, GI, Neuro, Endocrine, MSK, Infectious, Renal
Weekly Strategy:
Focus on 1–2 systems per day
Rotate systems every 2–3 days
Keep Sundays for summary review or rest
Example Plan:
Mon–Tue: Respiratory + Cardiovascular (8–10 conditions)
Wed: GI + Endocrine (4–6 conditions)
Thu: Neuro/MSK/Infectious (4–6 conditions)
Fri: Interpretation practice + OSCE checklists (e.g. 5 CXRs, 3 ECGs, 3 scoring systems)
Sat: Consolidation of weak areas + flashcard drills
Sun: Light review or rest
Total target: ~20–30 conditions/week + interpretation practice.
For high performers:
Aim for 5–6 conditions/day
Cycle through all topics in 4 weeks
Complete 1 full mock OSCE case/week
7. Make It Reflective
For each condition, ask:
Can I explain this clearly to a patient or examiner?
Would I spot this on the ward or in clinic?
Do I know the first-line investigation and treatment?
Record:
1 new clinical pearl or red flag you learned
1 mistake corrected today
Build this into your PassMap Reflect Journal.
End each week with a self-test:
Choose 5 conditions at random and complete a write-up or OSCE-style presentation from memory.
8. Get Involved
We’re building PassMap with you.
You can:
Request more topics or systems
Submit your mnemonics for review
Report outdated guidance
Join our testing group
Use our contact form or connect with us via social.
Final Advice:
To succeed in PARA, you need:
Pattern recognition — know the classic presentations
Fast recall — under exam pressure
NICE-aligned management — safe, evidence-based care
PassMap trains you in all three.
Track your progress. Use the mnemonics. Connect the dots.
Pass it with PassMap.