AKT MCQs
Single-best-answer items mapped to every domain of the RACGP curriculum.
For GP registrars · GP Exam Lab
AI-powered RACGP Fellowship prep — AKT MCQs across every curriculum domain, KFP cases with LLM grading, timed AKT mocks, and per-domain insights.
Five tools below — each one is a tab on the live station panel. Browse without signing in.
Plate 01 · AKT · Applied Knowledge Test
Cases written in the AKT register — short clinical vignette, one best answer from five options. Coverage mapped to the RACGP curriculum: acute care, women's health, paediatrics, mental health, chronic disease and more.
Every item tagged against the RACGP Fellowship curriculum so you know what you've covered.
Why the best answer is best, and why each distractor is a real GP-land trap.
Medicare items, PBS, MBS, RACGP guidelines — answers reflect Australian practice.
A 62-year-old man presents to your GP clinic with 30 minutes of central chest heaviness radiating to the left arm, mild nausea, no relief with rest. He is diaphoretic. BP 145/90, HR 96 regular.
PMH: hypertension, ex-smoker (quit 5 years). Meds: perindopril 5 mg daily.
What is the single most appropriate immediate management?
Sarah, 32, attends with 8 weeks of heavy menstrual bleeding and fatigue. Cycle regular, 28-day, soaking through a super tampon hourly on heaviest day. No intermenstrual or post-coital bleeding. Para 2, breastfeeding ceased 6 months ago. Examination unremarkable.
Hb 98 g/L · ferritin 6 µg/L · TSH normal · pregnancy test negative
List the four most appropriate initial investigations or actions you would take today. (4 marks · 1 per correct answer)
Plate 02 · KFP · Key Feature Problem
KFPs reward you for thinking like a GP — listing the most appropriate next steps in the order a Fellow would. We grade your free-text answers against the examiner marking schedule, accepting clinically equivalent phrasing.
Each case carries its own marking schedule, written against the RACGP KFP style.
"Oral iron" ≡ "iron supplementation" ≡ "ferrous sulfate" — the grader accepts clinical synonyms.
Wrong answers can subtract, just like the real KFP — no shotgunning rewards.
Plate 03 · per-domain insights
Accuracy tracked against every domain of the RACGP Fellowship curriculum, rolling 14-day window. KFPs and AKTs scored separately. The weakest domain is highlighted — that's where tomorrow's set starts.
Acute care, paeds, women's, mental health, chronic disease, Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander health — each tracked.
Knowing your AKT score doesn't tell you about your KFP — both are tracked.
The lowest domain with enough volume becomes tomorrow's recommended drill.
A 4-year-old presents with a barking cough, hoarse voice, and inspiratory stridor at rest. Temperature 38.2 °C, RR 32, mild intercostal recession. What is the single most appropriate first-line treatment, and why?
tap to revealOral dexamethasone 0.15–0.6 mg/kg (single dose). • Moderate croup (stridor at rest with recession) — corticosteroid is the cornerstone. • Oral dex is as effective as nebulised budesonide and far easier in primary care. • Nebulised adrenaline reserved for severe croup or rapid temporising before transfer. • Most cases settle within hours; safety-net for stridor at rest returning or worsening.
tap to flip backPlate 04 · flashcards
Cards you nearly miss reappear sooner. Decks seeded from your weakest curriculum domains this week — so the next 15 minutes of revision starts where it matters.
SM-2 schedules each card; no deck construction needed.
Cards prompt mechanism, rationale, dose — not single-word recall.
Anything you read in RACGP eLearning — paste it, tag it, it joins the cadence.
Plate 05 · exam mode
Real RACGP timing and shape. Flagging grid, no drip-fed feedback until the bell. The debrief afterwards links each miss back to a domain, a card, or a similar case to revisit.
No interruptions during. After: one scrollable page linking every miss to what closes the gap.
The grid tells you what's answered, flagged, and untouched — at a glance.
150 items at the actual 3.5-hour clock. Pacing tested honestly.
Q22 — A 56-year-old woman with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes (HbA1c 8.4%) has stage 3a CKD (eGFR 52). She has no cardiovascular disease but has obesity. Which first-line agent best balances glycaemic and renal benefit?
About GP Exam Lab
GP Exam Lab is an AI-powered RACGP Fellowship prep platform. Practise AKT single-best-answer MCQs across every domain of the RACGP curriculum; work through KFP-style Key Feature Problems graded against examiner schedules; sit full 150-question AKT mock papers at exam timing — with per-domain insights that pinpoint your weakest area.
Two human promises
We use AI to make practice realistic, instant and tireless. But the things that matter — the questions, the marksheets, the answer when you email us — come from real doctors.
Practising doctors and examiners write and review every simulated patient, MCQ, viva, flashcard and rubric before it reaches you. AI helps us scale; it never replaces the clinician at the keyboard.
Human-verified contentWhen you email [email protected] you reach a real person — usually a doctor or medical student — not a chatbot. We typically reply within 24 hours, often the same day.
Real humans on supportAKT-shaped MCQs across the RACGP curriculum. KFP short-answer cases graded by an LLM examiner. A 150-question timed paper. Insights that tell you which domain to revise next.
Single-best-answer items mapped to every domain of the RACGP curriculum.
Short-answer Key Feature Problems, graded against examiner schedules.
Accuracy tracked separately across each RACGP curriculum area.
SM-2 spaced repetition seeded from your weakest domains this week.
Full 150-question AKT paper at RACGP timing, with debrief.
Every item written and reviewed by practising Australian GPs.
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GP registrars already using GP Exam Lab to prepare with confidence.
About us
Auri was built by a group of Australian doctors who have a passion for making medical education and exam study as efficient as possible.
The team
GP, Adelaide, SA
FRACGP, M.D. (Griffith University)
Ophthalmology Registrar, Sydney, NSW
M.D. (University of Melbourne)
ENT Registrar, Adelaide, SA
M.D. (Griffith University)
GP, Adelaide, SA
FRACGP, M.D. (Griffith University)