PARA content map: Decoding the GMC Blueprint
1. What This Is Based On
This article is based on the official Physician Associate Registration Assessment (PARA) Content Map, published by the General Medical Council and updated December 2025.
Physician associate registration assessment (PARA) content map (GMC copyright)
The content map defines:
What knowledge may be tested
What clinical capabilities are expected
How the assessment is structured
What procedures newly qualified PAs must be competent in
If you are preparing for PARA, this is the blueprint.
2. The Structure of the PARA Content Map
Domain 1 – Professional Values & Behaviours
Covers:
Professional conduct
Duty of candour
Safeguarding
Legal & ethical responsibilities
Teamworking
Person-centred care
Primarily assessed in OSCE, but some aspects may appear in the Knowledge Test (KT).
Domain 2 – Clinical Capabilities
This is the majority of examinable content (page 6)
Includes:
Communication skills
Diagnosis
Clinical management
Emergency care (ILS level)
Escalation and supervision awareness
Safe prescribing principles
Documentation
This is where most written questions are derived from.
Domain 3 – Areas of Clinical Practice
This is the system-based section most students focus on (page 8).
There are 18 areas of clinical practice:
Acute & Emergency Care (inc. toxicology)
Cardiovascular
Child & Adolescent Health
Clinical Haematology
Dermatology
ENT
Ophthalmology
Obstetrics & Gynaecology
Endocrine & Metabolic
Gastrointestinal
Infection (inc. STIs)
Mental Health
Musculoskeletal
Neurosciences
Renal & Urology
Respiratory
Surgery
Palliative & End of Life Care
Each section includes:
Presentations (e.g., chest pain, breathlessness)
Core conditions
Uncommon but critical conditions
Example: Acute & Emergency Care
On page 9, the official document lists presentations such as:
Chest pain
Sepsis
Collapse
Trauma
Seizure
Overdose
Wheeze
Core conditions include:
Acute coronary syndrome
Diabetic ketoacidosis
Pulmonary embolism
Pneumothorax
GI bleeding
Intracerebral haemorrhage
Uncommon but critical conditions include:
Aortic aneurysm & dissection
Cardiac tamponade
Compartment syndrome
Polytrauma
This demonstrates the exam’s emphasis on life-threatening recognition and prioritisation.
Domain 4 Professional Knowledge
Covers:
NHS structure
Evidence-based medicine
Health promotion
Teaching & learning
These areas may appear in scenario-based questions (page 20)
🔬 Core Procedures
Pages 21–22 define procedural competence required at registration
Examples include:
Venepuncture
Cannulation
Arterial blood gas (simulation)
12-lead ECG
Urinary catheterisation
Nasogastric tube placement (simulation)
Oxygen administration
Drug dose calculations
Suturing and wound closure
All newly qualified PAs must be competent in adult patients.
3. Key Strategic Insights for Candidates
The content map also states clearly (page 3):
The document is a guide and is not exhaustive. The exam board may include additional content at their discretion where appropriate.
This means:
Memorising lists alone is insufficient
You must understand clinical reasoning
Escalation and safety judgement are central
🎯 4. What This Means for Your Revision
To align with the official blueprint:
Revise by system (Domain 3)
Anchor everything to emergency recognition
Practise next-best-step decision making
Master common + uncommon but critical conditions
Understand ILS-level emergency management
The exam is set at the level of a newly qualified PA entering their first NHS role (page 3)
5. How PASSMAP Aligns With This
PASSMAP mirrors:
The 18 clinical areas
Acute/emergency weighting
Core vs uncommon critical conditions
NICE-aligned management pathways
Decision-first exam structure
Every question is built around:
🔎 Recognition
🚨 Red flags
🧠 Prioritisation
📌 First-line management
Not passive recall.
Official Source
Physician associate registration assessment (PARA) content map (GMC copyright) Published December 2025
Preparing for PARA?
PASSMAP is:
Blueprint-aligned
NICE-based
Built for clinical decision-making
Structured for exam performance
Educational platform. Not medical advice.
Last reviewed: 22 February 2026
Source document: GMC PARA Content Map (Updated December 2025)
Next scheduled review: June 2026
This article is reviewed periodically to reflect updates issued by the General Medical Council and changes to the PARA blueprint.
