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The Toronto Notes 2007 is a comprehensive package of review material useful for medical students. Students studying for medical licensing exams have found that this is the one book that is able to quickly prepare you for the medical school licensing exam.
Written primarily for comprehensive coverage of all topics on MCCQE (or MCCEE) licensing exam. The book has also been revised to cover objectives for the USMLE Step 2 licensing exam with the revision of American standard units and the use of generic & American medication names. Students commencing clinical rotations in the hospital will appreciate the well organized and thorough chapters organized to be useful for various rotations in different clinical services. The Toronto Notes Clinical Information Set, a brand new PDA version, is a perfect companion for medical students and residents in clinical settings.
WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE SEVERAL NEW FEATURES TO THE 2007 TORONTO NOTES, INCLUDING:
TORONTO NOTES for MCCEE and MCCQE
· Anesthesia, Cardiac Surgery, Cardiology, Color Atlas, Community Health
· Dermatology, Diagnostic Imaging, Emergency Medicine, Endocrinology, Family Medicine,
· Gastroenterology, General Surgery, Geriatrics, Gynecology, Hematology,
· Infectious Disease, Nephrology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics,
· Opthalmology, Orthopedics, Otolaryngology, Pediatrics, Pharmacology,
· Plastic Surgery, Psychiatry, Respiratory, Rhematology, Urology
It’s a must for passing MCC Exams!
WHAT’S MCCEE
The MCCEE is designed as a general assessment of the candidate's basic medical knowledge of the principal fields of medicine, including Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Preventive Medicine and Community Health, and Surgery.
The exam is about 324 multiple choice question, taken with paper and pencil. There is no computerized version of the test. It will take 7 hours to administer the test, two 3.5 hour sessions with about a 45 minute to an hour break in between.
MCCEE QUESTIONS
Contains thousands of previous and actual Evaluating Exam Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs).
Covers the highest yield topics tested on MCCEE.
These Questions are a MUST HAVE for MCCEE!!
WHAT’s MCCQE PART 1
The MCCQE Part 1 consists of Multiple Choice Questions and Clinical Reasoning Skills (CRS) Cases, which test medical knowledge of Medicine, Surgery, Pediatrics, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Psychiatry, Population Health, Legal, Ethical, and Organizational aspects of Canadian medicine.
The MCCQE Part 1 is a one-day computer-based test. The candidate is allowed up to three-and-one-half (3 1/2) hours in the morning session to complete the 196 multiple-choice questions component.
Four (4) hours are allowed in the afternoon session for the Clinical Reasoning Skills (CRS) component, which
consists of short-menu and short answer write-in questions. The CRS portion consists of approximately 50 to 55 cases, with one (1) to four (4) questions each.
The ways to study for MCC exams
This is several points to think about for everybody decided to pass all.
MCC Fees
Evaluating Examination: new applicants ($1,000.00 CAN): $850.00 US
Part I ($Qualifying Examination 680.00 CAN): $578.00 US
for more information about mcc fees you can see the link of MCC Fees in home page
Time
You decided to pass these axams to improve your living condition.
Maybe you are single and intend getting married after passing them.
Maybe you are married and intend to have a baby but after passing them.
May be you are worried about the result of youe exams because you have afew time to study.
Travelling to exams center
Alot of applicant have not mcc center in their country,so they must pass mcc exams for the first thime they go to another country.
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MCC Evaluating Examination
The Evaluating Exam is for graduates of international medical schools.
The lists of these schools are published annually by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Medical Education Directory (IMED). Success at this examination is one of the conditions required for entrance to the Qualifying Examinations of Council except for graduates holding a diploma from a medical school accredited by the Committee on Accreditation of Canadian Medical Schools or the Liaison Committee on Medical Education of the U.S.A
MCC Evaluating Examination
The Evaluating Exam is for graduates of international medical schools.
The lists of these schools are published annually by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Medical Education Directory (IMED). Success at this examination is one of the conditions required for entrance to the Qualifying Examinations of Council except for graduates holding a diploma from a medical school accredited by the Committee on Accreditation of Canadian Medical Schools or the Liaison Committee on Medical Education of the U.S.A
Information for foreign-trained medical doctors
Information on requirements to practise
Those who practise this profession use one of the following titles: doctor, medical doctor, physician, family physician, general practitioner, or resident-in-training for one of these roles. Entry into the professions is regulated in Canada. This means that the requirements to practise are set by each provincial and territorial medical association. Once you know where you will settle and work in Canada, contact the appropriate provincial/territorial medical association (see list below) to obtain further information
Information for Graduates of Foreign Medical Schools
All persons applying through the skilled worker class, the family class and refugee class will be required to sign a declaration to the effect that if intending to work in a regulated occupation, it is the applicant's responsibility to obtain information on the requirements from the appropriate regulatory body in Canada and should a permanent resident visa be issued, it does not guarantee employment in a specific occupation.
Before you can be considered for licensure by one of the Canadian regulatory bodies, your basic medical knowledge must be evaluated. In most cases, this means that you must pass the Medical Council of Canada's Evaluating Examination (MCCEE). This examination evaluates your general medical knowledge compared to that of graduates of Canadian medical schools. It tests your understanding of the principal fields of medicine - including internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, psychiatry, preventive medicine and community health, and surgery. Most of the questions are intended to evaluate clinical knowledge, but there are some questions on basic medical sciences.
The examination is held four times a year, in various centres in Canada and abroad. It is given in English and in French. Before you are eligible to write the Evaluating Examination, you must complete all the requirements to obtain the qualification of Doctor of Medicine, or equivalent, from the university that granted your medical degree.