The Bottom Line
- The CCFP exam uses <strong>SAMPs (Short Answer Management Problems)</strong> and <strong>SOOs (Simulated Office Orals)</strong>.
- SAMPs test <strong>written clinical reasoning</strong> — concise, structured answers under time pressure.
- SOOs test <strong>live clinical performance</strong> — communication, examination, and management in a simulated encounter.
The Certification Examination in Family Medicine (CCFP) is the final assessment for family medicine certification with the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC). It tests whether you can manage the breadth of Canadian family practice safely and competently. The exam has two distinct components that require different preparation strategies: written clinical reasoning (SAMPs) and live simulated encounters (SOOs).
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Step 1 — Understand the SAMP format
SAMPs present a clinical scenario with a series of short-answer questions. You write brief, targeted answers: differential diagnosis, investigations, management steps, follow-up plans. You are scored on clinical accuracy, appropriateness for Canadian primary care, and conciseness. Practice writing answers, not just thinking them.
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Step 2 — Understand the SOO format
SOOs are simulated patient encounters with standardised patients and an examiner. You take a history, perform a focused examination, discuss your assessment and plan, and demonstrate communication skills. You are scored across CanMEDS roles: Medical Expert, Communicator, Collaborator, Health Advocate, and Professional.
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Step 3 — Build a SAMP practice routine (8–12 weeks out)
Do 2–3 SAMPs daily under timed conditions. After each: compare your answer to the model answer and note where you lost marks (missing a diagnosis? over-investigating? not addressing the patient's context?). Common SAMP topics: chronic disease management, acute presentations, preventive care, mental health, obstetrics, paediatrics, and palliative care.
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Step 4 — Build an SOO practice routine (6–8 weeks out)
Practise SOOs with peers or study partners acting as patients. Record yourself (video or audio) and review. Focus on: structured opening, focused history, appropriate examination requests, clear assessment communication, and shared decision-making. Time yourself — each SOO has strict limits.
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Step 5 — Master the '99 Priority Topics'
The CFPC publishes a list of priority topics for family medicine. These topics represent the clinical content the exam is built around. Use this list as your coverage checklist — ensure you can manage each topic at a primary care level. Cross-reference with your SAMP and SOO practice to identify gaps.
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Step 6 — Integrate CanMEDS throughout
SOOs are explicitly scored on CanMEDS competencies. When practising, consciously demonstrate: patient-centred communication (Communicator), appropriate referral and collaboration (Collaborator), advocacy for patient needs (Health Advocate), and professionalism. These are not add-ons — they are core scoring domains.
The Priority Topics list is your blueprint
The CFPC publishes priority topics that define the scope of the CCFP exam. Treat this list the way you would a formal exam blueprint — it tells you what to study. If you can manage each priority topic safely at a primary care level, you are exam-ready.
SOO preparation requires another person
You cannot effectively prepare for SOOs alone. The SOO tests live interaction — communication, examination technique, and real-time clinical reasoning. Practise with peers, use study groups, or arrange formal SOO practice sessions through your residency program. Solo reading is not SOO preparation.
Practice
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SourceCFPC — Certification Examination in Family Medicine
Open Link SourceCFPC — Priority Topics and Key Features
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