In order to be licensed in Canada, qualified international
physicians must take a series of three examinations in order to
be awarded the licentiate of the Medical Council of Canada:
- MCCEE—Evaluating Examination
- MCCQE-1— Qualifying Exam Part 1
- MCCQE-2—Qualifying Exam Part 2
1. Medical Council of Canada Evaluating Examination (MCCEE)
The MCCEE examination must be written by all internationally
trained physicians who wish to practice in Canada (graduates from
non Canadian/US medical schools).
This examination is a general assessment of medical knowledge
and is a prerequisite for admission to Canada on the basis of the
qualification in Medicine. The day-long pencil & paper
examination tests your knowledge in the principal fields of
clinical medicine and operates on a pass/fail system. Effective November 2005, the policy that limited the validity period of the MCCEE pass standing to 5 years is abolished. There are no longer any restrictions on a candidate’s pass standing on the MCCEE.
The MCCEE is written three times per year—January, May, and
September. There are 5 centers in Canada: Vancouver, Saskatoon,
Toronto, Montreal, and Halifax; and 6 testing centres overseas:
London, Paris, Riyadh, Hong Kong, Tokyo, and Muscat.
2. Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination - Part 1
(MCCQE-1)
This is a one day, 7.5 hour test administered on computer. The
examination is offered twice a year (May and November). The
MCCQE-1 is a computer-adaptive test, meaning the difficulty of a
section of questions is adjusted according to how well an
examinee performs on the previous section of questions. More
difficult items are weighted higher than easier items.
The MCCQE-Part 1 is administered in two parts: the first part
consists of a 3.5 hour, 196 item multiple choice examination,
with all questions asked in single best answer format. Question
stems are worded either positively (e.g., "Which of the following
is...") or negatively (e.g., "Which of the following is NOT...").
The second part of the MCCQE-Part 1 is a 4 hour test of clinical
reasoning skills consisting of 30-33 cases, each followed by 1-4
questions, for a total of 78-88 questions. These items require
examinees to select several actions from short menus of options
or to enter short fill-in (written) responses.
2. Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination - Part 2
(MCCQE-2)
This exam is an objective-structured clinical examination in
which candidates rotate through a series of stations. In each
station, a brief written statement introduces a clinical problem
and directs the candidate to appropriately examine a Standardized
Patient (i.e., obtain a focused history or conduct a focused
physical examination) and, in some cases, to respond to a series
of written questions relating to the patient examination. In the
patient examination stations, candidates are observed and
evaluated by Physician Examiners using predetermined checklists.
There are two types of stations: Couplet Stations and Ten-Minute
Stations.
For more information about Canadian Medical Licensing
Examinations, visit the Medical Council of Canada's website.