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Sexual Health

CSRH (MFSRH Part II OSCE)

Walk into your MFSRH OSCE having already done it — dozens of times

Practise the real MFSRH stations out loud against a simulated patient who responds realistically, any time of day. Get instant, examiner-style feedback after every encounter — no study partner, no booking, no waiting.

Practise MFSRH stations Free trial — no card required

What is the MFSRH OSCE, and how do you practise for it?

The MFSRH OSCE is a spoken clinical exam that assesses how you take histories, explain information, and handle patients and colleagues under timed conditions. The most effective way to prepare is to rehearse the real stations out loud — with MedMock you practise them against a realistic AI patient any time of day and get instant, examiner-style feedback after every one.

Last reviewed June 2026

You can know the medicine and still freeze in the room

The MFSRH does not test what you know — it tests what you can do with a real person sitting across from you, under time pressure. You can read every guideline and still mishandle the opening line, miss the patient's cue, or run out of time.

There is only one way to address this: practise out loud, repeatedly. The difficulty is finding someone to practise with. Study partners cancel, seniors are busy, and courses cost hundreds of pounds and book out months ahead — so most candidates arrive under-rehearsed and rely on adrenaline on the day.

MFSRH OSCE practice, on demand

Membership of the Faculty of Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare Part II OSCE: an eight-station, twelve-minute-per-station circuit covering sexual-history taking, contraception counselling, abnormal cervical screening result explanation, post-procedure complication discussion, adolescent sexual health, ethical confidentiality scenarios, urogynaecology risk communication, and management plan discussion.

MedMock gives you a simulated patient who responds realistically, available 24/7. Pick a station, have a genuine spoken conversation, and get instant, examiner-style feedback the moment you finish — scored against what genuinely matters in the MFSRH. No rota conflicts, no study partner, no waiting your turn. Simply practise whenever you have ten minutes.

How it works

1

Choose a station

Pick from the real MFSRH stations — all 8 of them, or let MedMock surprise you the way exam day will.

2

Have the conversation

Speak naturally, out loud. The AI patient responds in real time — with emotions, cues and unexpected turns, just like a real encounter.

3

Get instant feedback

The moment you finish, you get specific, examiner-style feedback and a score — what you did well, what cost you marks, and precisely what to fix before the next attempt.

Why candidates practise with MedMock

Practise out loud, any time

No study partner, no booking, no rota clash. Open MedMock at 6am or midnight and run a full station in minutes.

All 8 stations, endless variations

You will never simply memorise answers. Each run is different, so you build the real skill — adapting in the moment.

Examiner-level feedback in seconds

Know exactly where you lost marks and how to address it, instead of guessing why a mock session went poorly.

Turn nerves into muscle memory

By the time you sit the MFSRH, the format feels familiar — because you have already done it dozens of times.

A fraction of the cost of courses

Avoid the hundreds of pounds you would spend on a one-off exam course, and practise unlimited scenarios instead.

Practise anywhere, from your phone

On a break, during the commute, between jobs on the ward — your preparation goes wherever you do.

Practise every station

MedMock covers the stations you will face in the MFSRH OSCE. Rehearse each one until it feels routine.

1

History-taking: Sexual History

Twelve-minute focused sexual history with non-judgemental tone, 5 Ps framing, partner notification, and STI / safeguarding red-flag identification.

2

Contraception Counselling

Twelve-minute LARC / COCP / POP / emergency-contraception counselling — UKMEC-anchored shared decision-making and missed-pill rules.

3

Abnormal Cervical Screening Result Explanation

Twelve-minute explanation of an HPV / dyskaryosis / borderline / CIN result and the NHSCSP colposcopy pathway, with realistic risk framing.

4

Post-procedure Complication Discussion

Twelve-minute candour-led discussion of a complication following IUD insertion, abortion, or other SRH procedure — apology, cause, plan, follow-up.

5

Adolescent Sexual Health

Twelve-minute encounter with an under-16 patient — Fraser / Gillick competence, confidentiality limits, safeguarding floor, and age-appropriate options.

6

Ethical Scenario – Confidentiality

Twelve-minute confidentiality dilemma — usually adolescent / vulnerable-adult led, may rotate to colleague-disclosure or partner-notification framing; FSRH / GMC principles applied.

7

Management Plan Discussion

Twelve-minute discussion of a management plan for heavy menstrual bleeding, endometriosis, fibroids, perimenopause, PCOS, or similar — medical and surgical options weighed.

8

Risk Communication – Urogynaecology

Twelve-minute risk communication for urodynamics, mesh / sling / colposuspension surgery, pessary, or Botox — UK-mesh-pause-aware consent and conservative-first counselling.

Example scenarios

A sample of the scenarios you will practise — each plays out as a live, spoken conversation, not a script to read.

Contraception Counselling

Counsel a 22-year-old woman who has tried the COCP (mood / breast tenderness) and POP (irregular bleeding) and is now seeking a LARC. Tailor to her preferences and contraindications.

Adolescent Sexual Health

A 15-year-old presents requesting contraception without her mother's knowledge. Assess Fraser competence, explain confidentiality limits, and counsel on suitable options.

Ethical Scenario – Confidentiality

A 14-year-old discloses a sexual relationship with an 18-year-old partner during an EHC consultation. Apply FSRH and safeguarding frameworks in real time.

Abnormal Cervical Screening Result Explanation

Explain an HPV-positive high-grade dyskaryosis smear result to a 30-year-old and outline the colposcopy pathway and likely timelines.

Post-procedure Complication Discussion

A patient with persistent bleeding two weeks after surgical abortion. Apologise, explain retained-products differential, and outline the management and follow-up plan.

Risk Communication – Urogynaecology

A 54-year-old referred for urodynamics for stress urinary incontinence. Explain test purpose, what to expect on the day, and proportionate risks (UTI, voiding dysfunction) without minimisation.

Management Plan Discussion

A 28-year-old with newly diagnosed endometriosis. Discuss medical (hormonal suppression, analgesia) and surgical (laparoscopy, excision) options with realistic expectations.

History-taking: Sexual History

A 24-year-old with new urethral discharge and dysuria. Take a focused sexual history (5 Ps), screen for STIs / safeguarding, and outline next steps.

MFSRH practice — your questions answered

How realistic is MedMock's MFSRH practice?

Every scenario is built around the real MFSRH OSCE format and the domains examiners assess. You speak out loud and the AI patient responds in real time, so it feels far closer to the day than reading notes or rehearsing silently.

How does the feedback work?

As soon as you finish a station, MedMock gives you instant, examiner-style feedback and a score — highlighting what you did well, what cost you marks, and exactly what to work on next.

Can I practise specific MFSRH stations?

Yes. You can pick any of the 8 stations to drill a weak area, or run a mixed set to simulate the real exam.

Do I need a study partner or a fixed time slot?

No. That is the point — MedMock is available 24/7 and you practise alone, out loud, whenever it suits you. No coordinating diaries, no waiting for a course date.

Is MedMock right for me if I am sitting the MFSRH?

If your MFSRH exam involves speaking — histories, explanations, breaking news, dealing with patients and colleagues — then spoken rehearsal is exactly what MedMock is built for.

How much does it cost?

Far less than a one-off exam course, with unlimited practice. Everyone starts with a free trial — no card required — so you can see how it works before paying. See current options on our pricing page.

Disclaimer: National medical recruitment formats and Royal College examination criteria are subject to change annually. While Medmock strives for absolute accuracy based on the latest HEE/NHS England cycles, always consult your official applicant handbook or Royal College website for the definitive, up-to-date station requirements for your specific cohort.

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Ready for your MFSRH OSCE?

Rehearse real MFSRH scenarios out loud and get instant, examiner-style feedback.

  • Instant, personalised feedback
  • Real voice-to-voice conversation
  • Unlimited attempts, endless variations
Practise MFSRH stations

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Be ready for your MFSRH OSCE before you walk in

Start rehearsing MFSRH OSCE scenarios out loud today, get instant feedback, and turn exam-day nerves into something you have already done a hundred times.

Practise MFSRH stations