Residents can run 35-minute board simulations or short focused-practice sets. Program directors get structured reports, safety flags, and a clear view of cohort performance.
Demo available without an account. No credit card for the pilot.
Dr. Eleanor Vance
34:12
Examiner
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How it works
Every session turns into coachable evidence
Listen
A voice examiner asks board-style follow-ups and keeps the pressure realistic.
Score
Rubrics capture clinical decisions, missed priorities, and unsafe reasoning.
Debrief
Residents get a question breakdown, transcript, and prioritized study plan.
Track
Programs see performance, utilization, risk flags, and coverage from one view.
Two ways to practice
Full simulation when it counts. Focused practice when time is short.
Residents get realistic oral-board pressure without turning every study session into a 35-minute commitment. Programs keep the full full-simulation performance trend clean while giving residents room to drill.
35 minutes
Board simulation
Use when residents need exam-day pressure
A long case plus attached short cases, scored into the full-simulation performance trend programs use for coaching decisions.
Uses the full-simulation allowance
Pulls from full-exam inventory
Best for full-simulation checkpoints
5 minutes
Focused practice
Use for quick targeted reps
Standalone short cases with four questions, capped by practice minutes so drilling stays useful and controlled.
Uses practice minutes
Feedback only, not the performance trend
Does not preview full-simulation prompts
Program controls
Each resident gets separate test and practice balances, so programs can encourage drilling without open-ended usage.
Hear it for yourself
This is what the room sounds like
Press play. Hear the examiner your residents will face — and how a hesitant answer compares with a confident one.
Sample exam exchange
0:000:55
ExaminerA patient becomes hypotensive with bronchospasm immediately after cefazolin. What do you do first?
A hesitant answerUm, I would, uh, first check if the tube is kinked and maybe give albuterol. It could be anaphylaxis, but I'm not sure, so I'd maybe give some fluids and ask the surgeon…
A strong answerI treat this as anaphylaxis immediately. Stop the cefazolin, call for help, 100% oxygen, hand-ventilate, 10–20 micrograms IV epinephrine, repeat quickly or start an infusion, and run crystalloid wide open.
Medopsy is built to take a resident from the hesitant answer to the confident one.
Case coverage
Built across every oral-board domain
The library spans the major anesthesiology domains with full board simulations and standalone 4-question focused-practice sets, structured follow-up probes, and safety-critical checks that make grading clinically meaningful.
52
full simulations
156
focused-practice sets
10
major domains
Current library depth: 1,109 questions, 4,731 rubric items, and 563 reference anchors across the case bank.
Severe pulmonary hypertension for urgent abdominal surgery
CardiacCritical care
Postpartum uterine inversion with hemorrhagic shock
OBTrauma
Right pneumonectomy with refractory hypoxemia
ThoracicPractice set
Failed airway during trauma resuscitation
AirwayTrauma
Intraoperative Anaphylaxis During Laparoscopic Appendectomy
Sample report · Short case
76/100
On track
Critical Care82%
Ambulatory Anesthesia71%
Pain & Pharmacology64%
Safety finding · Proposed beta-blockade during anaphylactic hypotension
Beta-blockade worsens hypotension and blunts the response to epinephrine — the first-line treatment you correctly named later in the case.
118
words / min
6
filler words
2
long pauses
48
avg answer
1Review epinephrine dosing and escalation to infusion in refractory anaphylaxis (ASA practice advisory).
2Practice stating disposition plans with monitoring duration — biphasic reactions were missed here.
The report
Feedback worth reading, sixty seconds after you finish
Every session is graded against board-style clinical criteria. The report shows demonstrated decisions, missed clinical priorities, unsafe reasoning, communication patterns, and a prioritized study plan tied to references.
For program directors
See performance patterns before the exam date does
Medopsy flags residents who are at risk — approaching exam dates, low full-simulation volume, repeated safety findings, or declining trends — while there's still time to intervene.
Cohort performance and utilization analytics
Automatic risk detection and unsafe-response tracking
Separate tracking for full simulations and focused practice
Coverage analytics across the specialty content outline, with CSV export
Full report and transcript review for every session
The pilot mirrors the real allowance structure: full simulations for full-simulation checkpoints, focused practice minutes for shorter drills, and staff access for faculty review.
30 days free
No credit card for the pilot.
Pilot balance
1 full exam + 10 focused-practice minutes per resident.
$10/resident/month
Then 3 full simulations + 30 practice minutes per resident/month. Staff seats included.