![]() Even if you do choose to annotate a hard-copy, all of your notes should still be in that one hard copy (don’t have a separate notebook! Things will just get lost and confused). This is fine, though just be aware that this strategy may be a bit more clunky and time-consuming. Some students, who perhaps may be a bit old-fashioned, resist the pdf copy and prefer annotating a hard copy of First Aid. Furthermore, in a pdf copy, you can add nearly unlimited notes and content by adding “sticky notes” to appropriate locations. A pdf is easily searchable, allowing you to “control+F” phrases like “paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria” and get right to the page you need, rather than by flipping through endless pages in Renal? Heme? You get the picture. Often, this means the best way to annotate First Aid is through a pdf version. This means that all of your notes & annotations should be in ONE place, and that place should be First Aid. Use these lecture platforms as a way to walk through First Aid, and make sure that when you watch a video, you are looking at your First Aid, and taking notes. Your backup should be a video review platform – we recommend Osmosis (for intensive review periods) or Boards & Beyond (during coursework, or if you have loads of time). Pretty much everything you need to know is in there, but it’s just way too dense to make sense of it if you just try to sit down and read it without a backup. Instead of memorizing First Aid, treat First Aid like your one and only medical school textbook. Flashcards shouldn’t be used to memorize First Aid, because this will 1) rapidly lead to an overwhelming number of flashcards which the student will then struggle to keep up with and 2) consume inordinate amounts of time which would be better spent actively learning through UWorld questions. Incorrect questions in UWorld should trigger the creation of flashcards because this is a situation where the student is clearly missing some key piece of information which prevented them from answering the question correctly. ![]() Reviewing UWorld should involve going to the corresponding page in First Aid, adding any information from UWorld that is not present in First Aid, and then making ONE flashcard (but only if necessary) containing any relevant facts (not concepts) that the student has a hard time recalling. Instead, students should make flashcards when they are reviewing their UWorld questions. Making flashcards of every single detail you encounter in First Aid is also not the best use of most student’s time. Memorizing First Aid word-for-word is not a helpful study strategy, neither for the USMLE exam nor for life as a doctor. Doing this as soon as possible ensures that you won’t accidentally memorize something that is actually a mistake. Simply google “First Aid 20XX Errata” and that should get you what you need, often through a forum such as Reddit. Always buy from credible distributors!īefore you begin your intensive study, spend the couple of hours making sure that any and all errata are corrected in your edition. Be extremely weary of any website claiming to have an “early release” version of the newest First Aid edition. *Beware of fake copies being sold online! This has reportedly been a problem especially for IMGs. At the very least, the newest edition will be most reflective of recent exam content, as it has been most recently updated. The newest edition is often the best edition, simply because there have been several years of comments, suggestions, and corrections which are (often) for the best. Getting the newest edition of First Aid ensures that you are up-to-date with the most recent versions and changes to the USMLE exam, as high-performing students from the previous years’ cohort contribute suggestions and edits to First Aid. ![]() How to Make Memory Palaces in Medical School ![]() While using First Aid, follow this formula to get that score you’ve been dreaming of: ![]() These changes are reviewed by faculty and subsequently published. A new edition is released yearly to account for changes in the USMLE exam, updated with useful diagrams and charts, and mnemonics are added as students contribute what worked for them. Importantly to know, it is NOT written by the National Board of Medical Examiners, who create and administer the USMLE Step 1 exam. Together, First Aid and a well established qbank like UWorld can help both struggling students pass Step 1, and high-achievers score 260+.įirst Aid is a publication put out by McGraw-Hill Publishers (the ubiquitous textbook company of all educational resources in the Unites States), and is written by students who excelled on the exam. How to Use First Aid USMLE Step 1 to Study for Your Examįirst Aid USMLE Step 1 is arguably the most important study resource for the USMLE Step 1 exam (alongside your favorite qbank, of course!). ![]()
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