Mental State Examination for the AMC OSCE

Mental State Examination for the AMC OSCE

A Complete Domain-by-Domain Study Guide for IMGs

The Mental State Examination (MSE) is a structured, systematic assessment of a patient’s current psychological functioning. It is the psychiatric equivalent of the physical examination – and in the AMC OSCE, it is one of the most heavily tested and most frequently underprepared stations that IMGs face.

Unlike a psychiatric history, which explores what has happened over time, the MSE describes what you observe and elicit right now, in the consultation. Examiners expect you to present your MSE findings fluently, in the correct order, using precise psychiatric terminology – while maintaining a warm, therapeutic relationship with the patient.

This guide covers every domain of the MSE, gives you the exact language to use, explains what examiners are looking for, and prepares you for the most common OSCE scenarios including depression, psychosis, mania, anxiety, and suicidality

Psychiatric History

Mental State Examination

What the patient tells you (subjective)

What you observe and test (objective + subjective)

Covers the past and present timeline

Describes this moment – the current consultation

Includes background, family, social history

Focuses only on current mental functioning

Gathered through open questioning

Gathered through observation, questioning, and testing

Example: ‘Patient reports low mood for 3 months’

Example: ‘Affect is flat and congruent with depressed mood’

💡 Examiner Tip: In the OSCE, if you are asked to perform an MSE, do NOT present the psychiatric history. Start immediately with appearance and work through each domain systematically. Examiners award marks per domain – missing a domain loses a block of marks.

A reliable mnemonic for the MSE domains is ASEPTIC – Appearance, Speech, Emotion (Mood & Affect), Perception, Thought, Insight and Judgement, Cognition. In Australian psychiatric practice, Risk assessment is always added as a ninth, essential component.

MSE Domain

Observe (without asking)

Ask the Patient

Abnormal Findings to Report

1. Appearance & Behaviour

Dress, hygiene, grooming, eye contact, psychomotor activity, posture, build, apparent age vs actual age

No direct question needed – observe from the moment the patient enters

Dishevelled, malodorous, agitated, retarded, poor eye contact, inappropriate dress

2. Speech

Rate, rhythm, volume, tone, fluency, spontaneity, latency of response

Engage in conversation – speech features are observed, not asked

Pressured, poverty of speech, mutism, dysarthria, flight of ideas, circumstantial, tangential

3. Mood

Overall sustained emotional state (subjective – the patient’s own words)

“How have you been feeling in yourself lately?” “How would you describe your mood?”

Depressed, elated, anxious, irritable, euthymic, dysphoric, labile

4. Affect

Observed emotional expression in the moment (objective – what you see)

Observe facial expression, body language, reactivity throughout the interview

Flat, blunted, restricted, labile, incongruent, elevated

5. Perception

Hallucinations, illusions, depersonalisation, derealisation

“Do you ever hear, see, or feel things that others around you cannot?” “Do you ever hear voices when no one is there?”

Auditory, visual, tactile, olfactory or gustatory hallucinations; illusions; depersonalisation

6. Thought Form

How ideas are connected and expressed – the structure of thinking

Observe through conversation – does the patient get to the point? Do ideas logically connect?

Flight of ideas, loosening of associations, thought blocking, circumstantiality, tangentiality, neologisms, perseveration

7. Thought Content

The themes and preoccupations in what the patient says

“Are there any thoughts you can’t get out of your mind?” “Do you have any beliefs that others might find unusual?”

Delusions (persecutory, grandiose, referential), obsessions, overvalued ideas, ideas of reference, suicidal ideation

8. Insight & Judgement

Whether the patient understands they are unwell and that they need help

“What do you think is causing these experiences?” “Do you think you need any help or treatment?”

Full, partial, or absent insight. Poor judgement in social/financial/safety situations

Domain-by-Domain Deep Dive

Appearance and behaviour are assessed from the moment the patient enters the room. This domain provides your first clinical impression and often contains clues about the diagnosis before a single question is asked.

What to Assess and Describe
  • General appearance: age, sex, build, apparent vs stated age (looking older than stated age may suggest self-neglect or chronic illness)
  • Dress and grooming: appropriately dressed for the weather and occasion? Evidence of self-neglect (unkempt, malodorous, soiled clothing)?
  • Psychomotor activity: agitation (unable to sit still, pacing), retardation (slowed movement and speech), or normal
  • Eye contact: sustained, poor, avoidant, or intense/staring
  • Posture and gait: slumped, rigid, guarded
  • Rapport: did the patient engage easily? Were they cooperative, suspicious, hostile, or withdrawn?
How to Present This in the OSCE

Normal finding: The patient is a well-kempt woman who appears consistent with her stated age of 35. She is appropriately dressed, maintains good eye contact, and is cooperative throughout the interview. Psychomotor activity is within normal limits.

Abnormal finding – depression: The patient appears older than his stated age of 42. He is dishevelled with poor grooming and evidence of self-neglect. Psychomotor retardation is evident – he moves slowly, takes time to respond, and sits with a slumped posture. Eye contact is poor.

Abnormal finding – mania: The patient is wearing brightly coloured clothing, appears younger than her stated age of 38, and is highly animated. She is unable to sit still and makes intense, prolonged eye contact. She appears distractible and begins rearranging objects on the desk without prompting.

⚠️ Common Mistake: Do not say ‘the patient looks depressed’ – this is a conclusion, not an observation. Describe what you see: posture, grooming, eye contact, psychomotor activity. Let the examiner draw conclusions from your precise description.

Speech is assessed throughout the interview. You are not asking about speech – you are listening to it. Report on rate, volume, tone, fluency, and spontaneity.

Key Speech Descriptors

Term

What It Means

Pressured speech

Rapid, driven, difficult to interrupt – classic in mania

Poverty of speech

Minimal output, short answers, long latency – seen in depression and schizophrenia

Mutism

No speech at all – severe depression, catatonia

Dysarthria

Slurred or poorly articulated – consider organic causes (alcohol, neurological)

Dysphasia

Difficulty finding words or understanding – organic cause until proven otherwise

Circumstantial

Eventually reaches the point but via many tangents

Tangential

Never reaches the point – goes off on tangents and does not return

Flight of ideas

Rapid jumping between loosely connected ideas – mania

Thought blocking

Mid-sentence sudden cessation – the patient reports their thoughts have ‘gone blank’

Normal speech: Speech is of normal rate, rhythm, and volume. It is spontaneous and fluent, with no abnormalities of form.

Pressured speech – mania: Speech is rapid, pressured, and difficult to interrupt. The patient speaks over my questions and jumps between topics quickly.

Poverty of speech – depression: Speech is reduced in volume and rate. There is notable latency before responses, and answers are often monosyllabic.

💡 Examiner Tip: Always comment on speech even if it is normal – silence on any MSE domain implies you forgot to assess it.

Mood and affect are often confused by IMGs – and examiners know it. Understanding the distinction is essential.

Mood vs Affect – The Critical Distinction
 

Mood

Affect

Definition

The patient’s subjective, sustained emotional state – how they feel inside

The clinician’s objective observation of the patient’s emotional expression – what you see

Source

What the patient tells you

What you observe

Time frame

Sustained over days/weeks

In the moment, during the interview

Example

Patient says: “I’ve been feeling really low”

You observe: flat facial expression, tearful, minimal emotional range

How to document

“Mood is low/depressed in patient’s own words”

“Affect is flat and congruent with stated mood”

Affect Descriptors
  • Flat: virtually no emotional expression, even when discussing emotional topics
  • Blunted: reduced range and intensity of emotional expression
  • Restricted: narrowed emotional range but not absent
  • Labile: rapidly shifting emotional expression without apparent cause
  • Elevated / Euphoric: abnormally high, expansive mood – seen in mania
  • Dysphoric: an unpleasant, uncomfortable emotional state – not quite ‘sad’ but distressed
  • Euthymic: normal range of mood – use this term when mood is appropriate and within normal limits
Congruence – The Often-Missed Mark

Congruence refers to whether the affect matches the mood and the content of speech. Always comment on it.

  • Congruent: affect matches mood (e.g. flat affect with depressed mood = congruent)
  • Incongruent: affect does not match (e.g. laughing while describing a traumatic event – seen in schizophrenia)

Presenting mood & affect: Mood is low in the patient’s own words – she describes feeling ‘completely empty’. Affect is flat and restricted, with minimal variation throughout the interview and tearfulness when discussing her family. Affect is congruent with stated mood.

💡 Examiner Tip: Always present mood first (subjective), then affect (objective), then congruence. This is the expected order in Australian psychiatric practice.

Perception refers to how the patient experiences the world through their senses. Abnormalities of perception include hallucinations, illusions, depersonalisation, and derealisation.

Types of Perceptual Disturbance

Term

Definition

Clinical Association

Hallucination

A perception in the absence of any external stimulus – experienced as real

Auditory: schizophrenia, severe depression. Visual: delirium, substance use, dementia

Illusion

A misperception of a real external stimulus (e.g. seeing a face in shadows)

Anxiety, delirium, substance intoxication

Depersonalisation

Feeling detached from oneself – as if watching yourself from outside

Anxiety disorders, dissociation, depression, cannabis use

Derealisation

Feeling that the external world is unreal, distant, or dreamlike

As above – often occurs alongside depersonalisation

Pseudohallucination

A hallucination recognised by the patient as not real – heard ‘in the mind’s ear’

Borderline personality disorder, grief, less pathological than true hallucinations

Types of Auditory Hallucinations – Important for Schizophrenia
  • Second-person voices: voices addressing the patient directly (‘You are worthless’) – more common in severe depression
  • Third-person voices: voices talking about the patient (‘He is a spy’) – highly suggestive of schizophrenia
  • Running commentary: a voice providing a continuous commentary on the patient’s actions – first-rank symptom of schizophrenia
  • Command hallucinations: voices telling the patient to do something – assess URGENTLY if commands are to harm self or others
How to Ask About Perceptual Disturbance

Opening question: Sometimes when people are going through very difficult times, they can have unusual experiences. Have you noticed anything like that?

Hallucinations: Have you ever heard voices or sounds when there is no one around and nothing to explain them?

Visual hallucinations: Have you seen anything that others around you could not see?

Command hallucinations: Do the voices ever tell you to do things? What kinds of things? Have you ever felt compelled to follow what they say?

Depersonalisation: Have you ever felt as though you were watching yourself from outside your own body, or that you were somehow detached from yourself?

🚨 SAFETY ALERT: If the patient reports command hallucinations telling them to harm themselves or others, this requires immediate risk assessment. Do not continue with routine MSE – address safety first.

Thought is assessed in two distinct components: form (how thoughts are structured and expressed) and content (what the thoughts are about). Both must be assessed and presented separately.

Thought Form – Common Abnormalities

Abnormality

Description

Clinical Association

Flight of ideas

Rapid jumping between ideas connected by loose associations, rhymes, or puns

Mania

Loosening of associations

Ideas shift between unrelated topics with no logical connection

Schizophrenia

Circumstantiality

Reaches the point eventually but via many unnecessary detours

Anxiety, mania, mild thought disorder

Tangentiality

Never reaches the point – veers off and doesn’t return

Schizophrenia, mania

Thought blocking

Sudden cessation mid-sentence – patient reports mind going blank

Schizophrenia

Perseveration

Repetitive return to the same word or idea despite different questions

Organic brain disorders, OCD

Neologisms

Patient invents new words with private meaning

Schizophrenia

Poverty of thought

Very little thought content – few ideas, minimal elaboration

Depression, schizophrenia

Thought Content – Delusions

A delusion is a fixed, false belief that is not consistent with the patient’s cultural or religious background, held with full conviction, and not amenable to rational argument.

Type of Delusion

Description

Clinical Association

Persecutory

Belief that one is being followed, spied on, poisoned, or harmed – most common type

Schizophrenia, mania, substance-induced

Grandiose

Belief of exceptional ability, wealth, identity, or special mission

Mania, schizophrenia

Referential

Belief that external events, TV, radio, or strangers are sending personal messages

Schizophrenia

Nihilistic

Belief that oneself, others, or the world does not exist or is destroyed

Severe depression (Cotard’s syndrome)

Somatic

False belief about the body (e.g. internal organs are rotting)

Depression, schizophrenia

Erotomanic

Belief that a person (often of higher status) is in love with the patient

Schizophrenia, mania

Jealous (Othello)

Belief that one’s partner is unfaithful – held with pathological conviction

Alcohol-related, schizophrenia

First-Rank Symptoms of Schizophrenia – Know These

Schneider’s first-rank symptoms are highly specific to schizophrenia. Knowing these marks you as a candidate with advanced psychiatric knowledge:

  • Thought insertion: belief that thoughts are being placed into one’s mind by an external force
  • Thought withdrawal: belief that thoughts are being removed from one’s mind
  • Thought broadcasting: belief that one’s thoughts are being transmitted to others
  • Passivity experiences: belief that one’s actions, feelings, or impulses are controlled by an external force
  • Third-person auditory hallucinations: voices discussing the patient in the third person
  • Running commentary: a voice providing a continuous commentary on the patient’s actions
  • Delusional perception: a normal perception is given a bizarre, self-referential meaning
How to Ask About Thought Content

Persecutory delusions: Have you had the feeling that people are watching you, following you, or trying to harm you in some way?

Grandiose delusions: Have you felt as though you have special powers, a special mission, or that you are someone important?

Thought interference: Have you had the experience of thoughts entering your mind that feel as though they don’t belong to you? Or the feeling that your thoughts are being taken away or broadcast to others?

Ideas of reference: Have you noticed that things around you – like the television, radio, or strangers – seem to be sending you special messages or referring to you personally?

💡 Examiner Tip: When a patient describes a possible delusion, explore it gently without agreeing or challenging. Say: ‘That sounds like a very difficult experience. Can you tell me more about it?’ Challenging a delusion will shut the conversation down and cost you marks.

Cognitive assessment evaluates orientation, attention, memory, and higher-order functions. In the AMC OSCE, this domain is particularly relevant in presentations of delirium, dementia, and depression with cognitive symptoms. The Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) are the two standardised tools most commonly referenced.

Components of Cognitive Assessment

Cognitive Domain

How to Test It

Example Questions/Tasks

Orientation

Ask about time, place, and person

“What is today’s date?” “What day of the week is it?” “Where are we right now?” “What is your full name?”

Attention & concentration

Serial subtraction or digit span

“Can you count backwards from 100 by 7s?” (100, 93, 86…) or “Spell WORLD backwards”

Short-term memory

Register three items, distract, then recall

“I’m going to say three words: apple, table, penny. Can you remember those?” (test after 3–5 minutes)

Long-term memory

Ask about well-known historical events or personal history

“Who is the current Prime Minister?” “What year did World War II end?”

Language

Name objects, repeat a phrase, follow a three-step command

“Can you name this?” (show pen/watch). “Repeat after me: No ifs, ands, or buts”

Visuospatial

Draw a clock or copy intersecting pentagons

“Can you draw a clock face showing 10 past 11?”

Executive function

Abstract reasoning, proverb interpretation

“What does the saying ‘a stitch in time saves nine’ mean to you?”

Delirium vs Dementia – The Key Distinction

Feature

Delirium

Dementia

Onset

Acute (hours to days)

Gradual (months to years)

Course

Fluctuating – worse at night (sundowning)

Progressive, stable day to day

Consciousness

Impaired, clouded

Usually clear until late stages

Attention

Markedly impaired

Less affected early on

Reversibility

Usually reversible if cause treated

Generally irreversible

Cause

Always has a precipitating medical cause

Neurodegenerative process

💡 Examiner Tip: Always look for a reversible cause in delirium: infection (UTI, pneumonia), metabolic (electrolyte disturbance, hypoglycaemia), medication (opioids, benzodiazepines, anticholinergics), pain, urinary retention, constipation, or alcohol withdrawal.

Presenting cognition – normal: The patient is fully oriented to time, place, and person. Attention is intact on serial 7s. She recalls all three objects at five minutes. Language, visuospatial function, and executive reasoning appear intact. There is no evidence of cognitive impairment.

Presenting cognition – impaired: The patient is disoriented to time – he believes it is 2019 and cannot state the day of the week. Attention is markedly impaired – he is unable to complete serial 7s beyond the first subtraction. He recalls zero of three objects at five minutes. These findings are consistent with significant cognitive impairment and warrant formal assessment with the MMSE or MoCA.

Insight refers to the patient’s awareness that they are experiencing a mental illness and that they need help. Judgement refers to their ability to make sound decisions in everyday life. Both are distinct but related – and both must be assessed in every MSE.

Grading Insight

Level of Insight

What This Looks Like

Full insight

Patient acknowledges they are unwell, understands the nature of their illness, and accepts the need for treatment

Partial insight

Patient acknowledges some symptoms but minimises their significance or attributes them to an external cause

Absent insight

Patient denies any mental illness entirely, refuses treatment, and may not acknowledge that anything is wrong

How to Assess Insight and Judgement

Assessing insight: “What do you think is causing the experiences you’ve been having?” “Do you think you might need any help or support at the moment?”

Assessing judgement: “If you smelled smoke in a cinema, what would you do?” – or assess through collateral history of recent decisions

Presenting insight: The patient demonstrates partial insight – she acknowledges feeling unwell but attributes her symptoms entirely to work stress and declines the idea that medication could help.

💡 Examiner Tip: Insight is not binary – always describe the degree. ‘Insight is partial’ is far more useful to an examiner than simply ‘insight is absent’.

⚠️ Common Mistake: Do not confuse a patient disagreeing with you with having absent insight. A patient who understands they are unwell but prefers a different treatment approach may still have full insight.

Risk assessment is not just part of the MSE – in the AMC OSCE it is a standalone competency that carries significant weight. In any psychiatric station, failure to adequately assess suicide risk is a critical error that can result in a failing mark.

🚨 SAFETY ALERT: In the AMC OSCE, any patient presenting with depression, psychosis, substance use, or a history of self-harm MUST have a thorough suicide risk assessment. Do not skip this domain.

The Components of a Suicide Risk Assessment

Component

What to Assess

Suicidal ideation

Passive (wishing to be dead) vs active (intent to act on thoughts)

Plan

Does the patient have a specific plan? How detailed is it?

Method

What method have they considered? Is it lethal? Is it accessible?

Intent

How strong is the intent to act? Is there a timeframe?

Means access

Do they have access to the proposed method (e.g. medications, firearms)?

Previous attempts

History of prior attempts – frequency, method, lethality, rescue

Protective factors

Reasons to live – family, children, pets, faith, future plans

Risk factors

Male, older age, isolation, substance use, chronic illness, recent loss, access to means

Hopelessness

Hopelessness is a stronger predictor of suicide than depression – always assess it

How to Ask About Suicide – The Step-Wise Approach

Many IMGs avoid asking about suicide directly for fear of ‘planting the idea’. This is a myth – research consistently shows that asking about suicide does not increase risk. In Australia, direct and compassionate questioning is considered best practice.

Opening gently: When people are going through very difficult times, they sometimes have thoughts of not wanting to be here any more. Have you had any thoughts like that?

Exploring passive ideation: Have you had thoughts of wishing you were dead, or that you would not wake up in the morning?

Exploring active ideation: Have you had thoughts of actually ending your life – of acting on those feelings?

Exploring plan: Have you thought about how you might do it?

Exploring access to means: Do you have access to [the method they described] at home?

Exploring intent and timeframe: Have you made any plans about when or where this might happen?

Exploring protective factors: What has stopped you from acting on these thoughts? Is there anything – or anyone – that feels like a reason to stay?

Exploring hopelessness: When you think about the future, what do you see? Does it feel like things could get better?

Risk Stratification – What to Do with the Information

Risk Level

Features

Management in the OSCE

Low risk

Passive ideation only, no plan, strong protective factors, engaged with clinician

Safety plan, follow-up appointment, involve supports, remove access to means where possible

Moderate risk

Active ideation, vague or no specific plan, some protective factors, ambivalent

Urgent psychiatric review, consider voluntary admission, involve family/carer, safety plan

High risk

Active ideation with specific plan, access to means, intent, hopelessness, previous attempts, no protective factors

Emergency psychiatric assessment, likely involuntary admission under the Mental Health Act, do not leave patient alone

🚨 SAFETY ALERT: In Australia, if a patient is at imminent risk of suicide and refuses voluntary treatment, doctors have a duty of care to initiate an involuntary psychiatric assessment under the relevant state Mental Health Act. In the OSCE, stating this clearly demonstrates that you understand your legal obligations in Australian psychiatric practice.

The Safety Plan

For lower-risk patients, a safety plan is an evidence-based intervention that should be offered at the end of a risk assessment. Mention it in the OSCE:

  1. Identify warning signs that a crisis may be building
  2. Internal coping strategies – what the patient can do by themselves to feel better
  3. Social contacts who can provide distraction and support
  4. People the patient can ask for help
  5. Professionals to contact in a crisis: GP, mental health team, emergency department
  6. Crisis lines: Lifeline (13 11 14), Beyond Blue (1300 22 4636), Suicide Call Back Service (1300 659 467)
  7. Making the environment safe – removing access to means

💡 Examiner Tip: Mentioning Lifeline (13 11 14) and Beyond Blue by name in the OSCE demonstrates knowledge of Australian mental health resources – a mark many IMGs miss.

Putting It All Together - Common AMC OSCE Psychiatric Scenarios

MSE Domain

Expected Findings

Appearance

Dishevelled, psychomotor retardation, slumped posture, poor eye contact, tearful

Speech

Slow rate, reduced volume, long latency, poverty of speech

Mood & Affect

Mood is low/depressed in patient’s own words. Affect is flat and restricted, congruent with mood

Perception

May have auditory hallucinations (second-person, derogatory) in psychotic depression

Thought Form

Poverty of thought, slowed thinking

Thought Content

Hopelessness, worthlessness, guilt, suicidal ideation. Nihilistic delusions in severe cases

Cognition

Subjective cognitive complaints – poor concentration, memory difficulties

Insight

Often partial to full – patient usually knows something is wrong

Risk

Always assess suicide risk – depression carries significant risk

MSE Domain

Expected Findings

Appearance

Brightly dressed, excessive makeup, animated, appears younger, little evidence of fatigue

Speech

Pressured, rapid, loud, difficult to interrupt, flight of ideas

Mood & Affect

Mood is elevated and euphoric in patient’s own words (‘I feel incredible’). Affect is labile and elevated, may be irritable if challenged

Perception

Auditory hallucinations possible in severe mania (psychotic mania)

Thought Form

Flight of ideas, tangentiality, distractible

Thought Content

Grandiose delusions, reduced need for sleep reported without distress, excessive plans and spending

Cognition

Attention impaired due to distractibility, orientation typically intact

Insight

Often absent or minimal – patient does not believe they are unwell

Risk

Risk of harm due to disinhibition, reckless behaviour, financial decisions, and vulnerability to exploitation

  1. MSE Domain

    Expected Findings

    Appearance

    May be dishevelled, guarded, suspicious, limited eye contact, responding to internal stimuli (e.g. laughing or muttering to themselves)

    Speech

    May be disorganised, tangential, or have poverty of speech. Possible neologisms.

    Mood & Affect

    Affect is often flat or blunted and incongruent with content of speech

    Perception

    Auditory hallucinations – especially third-person, running commentary, or command hallucinations

    Thought Form

    Loosening of associations, thought blocking, tangentiality

    Thought Content

    Persecutory, referential or grandiose delusions. Thought insertion, withdrawal, broadcasting (first-rank symptoms)

    Cognition

    Executive function and working memory may be impaired

    Insight

    Usually partial to absent

    Risk

    Risk of self-neglect, self-harm (especially if command hallucinations), and harm to others if paranoid

How to Present Your MSE to the Examiner

In the OSCE, you will often be asked to present your MSE findings verbally. Practice presenting in a fluent, logical, confident manner using the correct sequence and terminology. Here is an example of a high-scoring MSE presentation for a patient with depression:

Major Depressive Episode – On appearance, Mr Ahmed is a 45-year-old man who appears consistent with his stated age but is dishevelled with poor grooming and evidence of self-neglect. He is dressed in crumpled clothing and has an unshaven appearance. Psychomotor retardation is evident – he moves slowly and takes time to settle. Eye contact is poor and intermittent throughout the interview.  Speech is reduced in rate and volume, with notable latency before responses. His answers are brief and require prompting to elaborate.  Mood is low in the patient’s own words – he describes feeling ‘completely hopeless and empty’. Affect is flat and restricted, with tearfulness when discussing his family. Affect is congruent with stated mood.  There are no perceptual disturbances reported – he denies auditory or visual hallucinations.  In terms of thought, form appears intact with no formal thought disorder. Thought content is notable for themes of hopelessness, worthlessness, and guilt. He reports passive suicidal ideation – wishing he would not wake up – but denies active plans or intent at this time.  Cognitive assessment reveals subjective difficulties with concentration and memory, consistent with his presentation. Formal testing is deferred pending full assessment.  Insight is partial – Mr Ahmed acknowledges feeling unwell but attributes his symptoms to personal failure rather than illness. He is ambivalent about treatment.  Risk assessment reveals passive suicidal ideation with no specific plan or intent. Protective factors include his children and his religious beliefs. I would complete a full risk assessment and develop a safety plan before concluding this consultation.

How Oyamed Helps You Master the Mental State Examination

The MSE is a skill that requires practice – not just reading. At Oyamed.com, our psychiatric skills programme gives IMGs the tools to perform a confident, fluent, and clinically accurate MSE under exam conditions.

  • Full mock MSE stations with actor patients presenting as depression, mania, psychosis, and anxiety
  • Video demonstrations showing exactly how to introduce each domain, use the correct terminology, and present findings to an examiner
  • Downloadable MSE domain-by-domain checklists to use in your practice sessions
  • Dedicated risk assessment training – the most high-stakes skill in psychiatric OSCE stations
  • Side-by-side scenario comparisons: depression vs mania, delirium vs dementia, psychosis vs severe anxiety
  • Australian-specific content including Mental Health Act obligations, Lifeline and Beyond Blue resources, and culturally safe psychiatric practice
🚀 Master the MSE. Pass the AMC OSCE.

Start your Oyamed free trial today at oyamed.com and practise with real OSCE stations.

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MENTAL STATE EXAM