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36 contributions to Doctri
🚨 Not using the Doctri UCAT Software yet? You’re missing out on a huge edge.
We’ve built a custom tool to actually prepare you the way top 700+ scorers do — with exam coverage, AI timing strategy, adaptive drills, and real-time tracking. If you're not on it yet, book a quick prep call with our medic team — we'll walk you through exactly how to maximise the next few weeks and see if the software’s a fit for you. 🎯 No pressure. Just clarity. 👉 https://calendly.com/doctri/30min
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⚖️ UCAT Doctri SJT Question Drop – What Would You Do?
You are a final-year medical student on placement. A junior doctor asks you to take blood from a patient. You’ve observed the procedure many times but have never done it unsupervised. The ward is extremely busy, and the doctor says: “It’s fine — just go for it, it’s easy.” How appropriate are the following actions? 1. Politely decline and explain that you haven’t done this unsupervised before. 2. Attempt the blood draw to avoid letting the doctor down. 3. Ask a nurse on the ward if they can supervise you. 4. Say nothing, pretend to be confident, and try anyway. Answer options for each action: - Very appropriate - Appropriate - Inappropriate - Very inappropriate The official answer with breakdown and insider tips will be posted in the comments shortly. Don’t miss it 🔥
0 likes • Jul 6
✅ SJT Question Answer & Explanation ⏪ Recap You’re a final-year medical student on placement. A junior doctor asks you to take blood from a patient. You’ve never done this unsupervised. The doctor says, “It’s fine, just go for it — it’s easy.” ❓Question How appropriate are the following actions? 1. Politely decline and explain you haven’t done this unsupervised before. ✔️ Very Appropriate - ✅ Why? This shows self-awareness, honesty, and prioritisation of patient safety — all core values in the GMC’s Good Medical Practice. - 💡 Tip: UCAT rewards clear communication and knowing your limits as a student. Always be honest and transparent if you’re unsure. 2. Attempt the blood draw to avoid letting the doctor down. ❌ Inappropriate - 🚫 Why? You’re risking patient safety to appease a colleague. This shows poor judgement, lack of confidence in boundaries, and puts both you and the patient at risk. - 💡 Tip: Don’t prioritise hierarchy over safety in SJT questions. “Not letting someone down” is never more important than doing what’s right. 3. Ask the nurse on the ward to supervise you instead. ✔️ Appropriate - ✅ Why? This shows initiative and a desire to complete the task safely. It’s not the best option (nurses may not be able to supervise), but it’s a reasonable alternative. - 💡 Tip: The best answers in UCAT SJT usually involve asking for support, supervision, or deferring to a senior. 4. Say nothing, pretend to be confident, and try anyway. ❌ Very Inappropriate - 🚫 Why? This is deceptive and dangerous. You lack the competence, and pretending otherwise compromises trust and safety. - 💡 Tip: If the question involves dishonesty, faking competence, or hiding inexperience, it’s almost always very inappropriate. 🧠 Summary Tips for UCAT Situational Judgement (SJT) - 🛡️ Patient safety > everything else - 🗣️ Be honest and communicate concerns clearly - 🧍‍♂️ Know your level and your boundaries - 🙋‍♂️ Seek supervision or escalate appropriately - ❌ Never do something you’re not trained or allowed to do
🧠 UCAT Tip of the Day: Master the Art of Skipping
One of the biggest mistakes students make in the UCAT is getting stuck on hard questions. Remember: the UCAT is a speed test, not a perfection test. ✅ If a question is taking more than 30 seconds and you’re not making progress — flag it and move on. ✅ You can always come back if you have time at the end (and you often will if you don’t waste time early). ✅ Skipping is a strategy, not a failure. Top scorers don’t answer every question perfectly — they manage their time ruthlessly and play the percentages. 🚀 Train yourself to spot time traps and build speed, not just accuracy. 💬 What’s your biggest time-waster in the UCAT right now? Drop it below — let’s solve it together. ❓Stay tuned for tomorrow’s UCAT practice questions – straight from our mentors.
🚀 DOCTRI IS BACK – AND SO IS THE MOST POWERFUL UCAT TOOL YOU’LL EVER USE.
Over 200 members are already using our brand-new AI UCAT Question Bank, and the feedback has been incredible. From score boosts to game-changing insights — we’re hearing it all. And now, it’s your turn. 💥 Here’s what’s inside the software (and why everyone’s talking about it): - 🧠 Exam-style UCAT Questions– Smart, adaptive, and tailored to the real UCAT exam– Covers all four sections: VR, QR, DM, and SJT - 📊 Detailed Performance Analytics– Track your progress over time– Spot your weak areas instantly– Get personalised recommendations powered by AI - 🤖 Helix AI+ Integration– Ask the AI to explain questions, break down answers, and even quiz you on the go– Like having a UCAT tutor 24/7 - 💬 Medic Mentor Support– Access real med students and doctors for guidance– Insider tips from people who’ve actually been there - 🎓 Built by Medics, For Medics– No fluff. No recycled questions. Just tools that actually work. - 💸 And yes — this is worth £50, but FREE for all Doctri members. We’re hyped to be back, and the community is already thriving. If you're serious about UCAT this year, don't sleep on this. Let’s make this your best prep season ever. 👊 🟢 Get started now: DM an Admin to get your exclusive access code 👉 https://doctri.io/
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Letter of recommendation
I heard that letters of recommendation are a great asset to getting into medical school is it correct ?
0 likes • Mar 4
Hey Kate (: Letters of recommendation are always a great asset to have in your portfolio
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Nick P.
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11points to level up
@nick-p-9656
Medical Student 🎓 | Co-founder of Doctri 🩺

Active 23h ago
Joined Nov 23, 2024