Exam Pattern
Part I examination–
Date and venues
It is held annually in September or early October simultaneously in several centres. The venues sell out like hot cake on a first-come, first-serve basis. You need to keep a keen eye on the opening of online bookings if you wish to book the centre of your choice. *TIP* Sign in to the ESA website for the earliest ping on examination updates right in your inbox.
Languages
Besides English, the examination is conducted in a multitude of other languages as well. German, French, Spanish, Italian, Russian, Polish, Hungarian, Portuguese, Turkish, and Romanian are other languages provided.
Pattern
It is curated in form of MCQs in two parts. The first paper covers basic sciences, and the second half is dedicated to clinical anaesthesia and intensive care medicine.
Paper A
Basic Science (60 MCQ’s), includes Physiology (20 MCQ’s), Pharmacology (20 MCQ’s) and Physics, Clinical Measurement, Statistics (20 MCQ’s).
Paper B
Clinical Practice (60 MCQ’s), including General anaesthesia, Special anaesthetic techniques, Local/regional anaesthesia, Intensive care, Internal medicine and Emergency medicine.
For sample paper please visit here
Marking
Part I exam and ITA are based on positive marks for every correct entry and do not include negative marking. Each question has 5 options and each one needs to be marked true or false. Each correct entry (T/F) carries a positive mark, while incorrect entries are marked as null/zero. Candidates attempting the examination must attempt all the questions maximising their chances of success.
Part II examination–
Pre-requisite/ criteria for sitting in Part II
1. Candidates need to clear the Part I examination before they can sit in for the second part.
1. + A certification in anaesthesia from their native country.
2. OR Applicants in the final year of Anaesthesia training in the European member states of the World Health Organisation.
2. There are some exceptions to this :
1. Candidates from Pakistan should hold FCPS or equivalent before sitting for EDAIC. Part I is not exempted for FCPS holders.
2. FRCA/FCAI/FCARCSI are exempted from EDAIC I.
Date and venues
Part II examinations are held annually between February and December each year, in several centres. The venues are served on the first-come, first-serve basis and stay open for a week for native candidates before opening up for the rest of candidates. The popular centres sell out fast.
Languages
Candidates may be examined in English, French, German, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish or Scandinavian languages (provided there is sufficient demand).
Pattern and results
Part II is carried in form of oral viva spanned across 4 sessions, interrupted for a lunch break (online and F2F format). The First 2 cover basic sciences and the next 2 cover clinical anaesthesia and intensive care (scope is the same as in part-1). The viva also includes ECG and Radiology spots (XRAY, MRI, CT scan).
Students are given 10 minutes time before each viva and presented with the starting question of the examiner. Sheets of paper and pencil are provided to formulate their strategy, chart down their answers focusing on suitable scoring points, and draw diagrams/charts/equations.
Students are interviewed by a set of two examiners at multiple stations at the same time. The interaction is very student-friendly and encouraging.
The examination of each candidate is held in a single day during which there are four separate 25-minute oral examinations (vivas). In each of these, the candidate is examined by a pair of examiners (each of different nationality), thereby meeting eight examiners in all. As far as possible, candidates are not examined by examiners to whom they are known.
The results are announced at the end of the day itself, celebrated with a toast of champagne by examiners and examinees, providing for an amicable interaction ground. The final confirmation with marks is mailed within a period of 2 weeks.
Examination cost
check www.esaic.org for latest updates
EDAIC I: €340. Reduced fees €150. Both include 1 year free ESA membership.
EDAIC II: €550 for first attempt, €340 further attempts.
OLA: €50.
ILT: €100.
EDAIC authentication by external institute: €50.
Syllabus and recommended reading by ESAIC
The examination is based on the “SYLLABUS TO THE POSTGRADUATE TRAINING PROGRAM FROM THE STANDING COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION AND TRAINING OF THE SECTION AND BOARD OF ANAESTHESIOLOGY”.
“Lessons from My Journey”
From my own journey, I recommend dedicating 6–8 hours of study daily, starting at least 4–6 months before the exam. By the time you sit for EDAIC, you should ideally be on your fourth revision. More than anything else, it is persistence and perseverance that will carry you through to success.
EDAIC 1
1. Fundamentals of anaesthesia by Collin Pinnock/Tim Smith. This book is a must-read and perhaps the most important resource for anyone preparing for EDAIC. It provides clear explanations and solid grounding in essential concepts. Particular attention should be given to the chapters on Respiratory, CNS, Cardiology, Renal physiology, and Pharmacology. These are core areas that consistently form the backbone of the exam.
2. Q base 2,4,6
3. Getting through
4. A book of your choice for clinical anaesthesia – Morgan, Barash, etc, which you have already read, and are comfortable with. You can choose to read all topics from here and skip Fundamentals of Anaesthesia, without major loss.
5. Recent updates on hot topics like sepsis, ventilation in ARDS, renal failure, nutrition, LAST, Anaphylaxis, etc.
6. Mock tests by targetedaic
EDAIC 2
1. Dr Podcast Scripts parts 1 and 2 are very important and are a must-read.
2. Tata clinical book is a very helpful resource for acing the viva with very relevant clinical scenarios. Students can also read any of the following for Viva practice – the clinical viva + the science viva book, or the master pass.
3. For graphs and diagrams – Plunkett, or a book called Diagram or Die. Plunkett is our personal favourite for Graphs, a quick review of basic physiology and physics.
4. ECG: ECG made easy, ECG for the Anaesthetist by targetedaic.
5. Radiology: Chest X-Ray made easy. Nowadays, they have added CT scans and MRI films to the viva scope, and the basics must be read before the examination from any radiology book or internet resources. Radiology for the Anaesthetist by targetedaic.
7. Pharmacology: Morgan or Basics of Anaesthesia by Pinnock.
Our MCQ section covers a different topic each day with the intent that candidates can prepare one small topic each day, making a steady progress in their exam preparation.