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Phase 3 Medicine 2026

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An 86-year-old is brought in by her daughter due to a week

history of confusion and inability to manage at home.  She has been living independently for the

last 12 months since being widowed, but in the last week there have been times where she has not remembered to take her medications or eat meals at the right time.  She was seen by the GP but at that point seemed reasonably good and the GP didn't think there was anything to worry about. Her daughter has no confidence in the GP

and hence brought her into the ED.

Which of the following in the history is suggestive of

delirium and not dementia?

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A 22 -year-old man is brought in by police. He is physically

aggressive and has been restrained with handcuffs. In the ED, he continues to

be combative. Verbal de-escalation has been unsuccessful.

Which of the following is the most appropriate management?

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A mother of 2 presents to the ED with insomnia and

restlessness. Her HR is 105/min, BP 124/80 RR 20/min Temp 37.8C. She tells you

she is so restless that she cannot work and cannot look after her children.

Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in

your management in the ED?

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A 52-year-old man is brought in by ambulance to the ED. He

has been agitated and abusive to his neighbours. On review in the ED, he is

noted to be severely paranoid, claiming government is after him. Verbal

de-escalation in the ED is unsuccessful. 

Patient has agreed to take oral medication

Which of the following is the most appropriate medication to

use?

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A 45-year-old man is brought in by his wife. He has been verbally aggressive towards her for the last 4 weeks after losing his job. He is not normally on medications. He does not drink alcohol. On examination, he is disorientated, but calm and cooperative.

Which of the following is essential to his initial evaluation in the Emergency Department?

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A 55-year-old man presents to the ED with an acute behavioural disturbance and requires parenteral sedation, What action should follow after the administration of IMI droperidol?
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A 50-year-old man requires parenteral sedation in the ED for acute behaviour disturbance. He did not settle after intramuscular injection of the first-line medication. What would be your next steps?
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A 50-year-old man is brought in by ambulance to the ED with an acute behaviour disturbance. The paramedics state that they offered him some PO diazepam but he refused to take it. Verbal de-escalation and other measures have failed and you are concerned that he is at risk of harming himself. 

Which of the following is the recommended first-line medication for parenteral sedation?
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A 30-year-old male has presented to ED following an episode of chest pain after a weekend of binging on cocaine and alcohol. Whilst waiting for his blood test results he starts to become agitated. 

What is the first line of approach to his acute agitation?
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When accessing a patient with acute behaviour disturbance (ABD) in the Emergency Department (ED), which of the following is an acceptable rationale to physically restrain a patient?
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