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How to Prepare for a PSA Re-Sit and Pass with Confidence

If you’re preparing for a Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA) re-sit, you’re not alone – and you’re not at a disadvantage. Many students go on to pass the PSA confidently on their second attempt with the right preparation, mindset, and resources.

This blog is here to help you reflect, reset, and build a practical, focused plan to succeed next time.

1. Reflect on your first attempt

Before jumping straight back into revision, take time to reflect on your previous sitting:

Use any feedback you received, either from your practice papers or your exam performance, to identify where things went wrong. Understanding why you struggled is the first step to improvement.

2. Give yourself enough time to prepare

Plan your time well and start early. Build a revision schedule that gives you:

Aim for quality over quantity – even short, focused sessions can be effective when you’re working on specific areas of weakness.

3. Focus on the question types that cost you marks

The PSA is made up of eight distinct question styles, each testing different aspects of safe prescribing. Some commonly tricky areas for re-sitters include:

Work through each question style individually and learn the best strategy to tackle them. There’s a breakdown of all question types on the BPS Assessment Learner’s Portal to guide your practice.

4. Practise using the BNF effectively

Knowing how to navigate the BNF resources quickly and confidently is crucial for the PSA. If you’re resitting, chances are you already understand the structure, but you may still be losing time on questions if you can’t locate key information fast.

Focus on:

Spend time practising BNF-based lookups during your revision, especially within the timed setting of a mock paper. Remember you’ll have access to; Medicines Complete BNF and BNFc and NICE BNF and BNFc (only in the UK), so it’s important to be familiar with both. 

5. Make the most of freely available resources

You don’t need expensive tools to pass the PSA, just the right ones.

On the BPS Assessment Learner’s Portal, you’ll find:

Use these resources to revise smarter and improve your confidence ahead of your re-sit.

6. Don’t be afraid to ask for support

It’s easy to feel disheartened after not passing the first time, but support is available:

And most importantly – be kind to yourself. Failing an exam does not define your ability to be a safe, competent prescriber.

You’ve Got This

Failing the PSA first time isn’t the end of your journey – it’s a step on the path to mastering safe prescribing. With focused revision, support from your faculty, and the resources available, you can go into your re-sit with clarity and confidence.

Start early, stay focused, and believe in your ability to succeed!

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