Postgraduate Medical Council of Victoria (PMCV) Interviews Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

You are an intern on a busy surgical service and are asked to chart a medication for a patient you have not managed before. What should you do?

Discuss indications for medication, is it a regular med or new

Explain to nurse that need some time to review clinical situation, medication and doses

Taking time to verify before charting is about patient safety in prescribing. As an intern, you don’t want to guess a dose or assume a medication is appropriate for a patient you haven’t managed yet. Asking the nurse for a moment to review the clinical situation, the specific medication, and the correct doses creates a necessary pause to confirm several crucial details: the exact indication for this patient, current medications and potential interactions, allergies, organ function that could affect dosing, and any recent changes in the patient’s status. It also signals to the team that you are checking the facts and will proceed under proper supervision if needed.

If a medication is urgent, you would escalate to your supervisor, but the first step is to review rather than commit to a plan without verification. While discussing indications with the nurse or looking up guidelines can be helpful, they don’t replace the need to tailor the decision to this patient’s chart and clinical context.

Discuss with nurse to ask specifically how urgent it is, if it is urgent then escalate to supervisor

Check online guidelines surrounding indications and contraindications of prescribing

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