Saudi Medical Licensing Examination (SMLE)

Purpose of This Book

This book is designed as a comprehensive, exam‑oriented question bank to support candidates preparing for the Saudi Medical Licensing Examination (SMLE). It is structured to function not merely as a collection of questions, but as a complete learning and revision resource aligned with the Saudi Commission for Health Specialties (SCFHS) blueprint.

The philosophy of this Q‑bank mirrors the approach used in high‑stakes postgraduate examinations: assessment‑driven learning, clarity of concepts, and elimination of common pitfalls. Each question is written to test clinical reasoning, not rote memorisation, and every explanation is intended to reinforce examinable principles.

The answer format strictly follows a structured MRCS‑style framework, ensuring consistency, depth, and transparency:

  • Question stem

  • Five single best answer (SBA) options

  • Clearly identified correct answer

  • Focused explanation of why the answer is correct

  • Explicit discussion of why the remaining options are incorrect


Overview of the SMLE

The Saudi Medical Licensing Examination (SMLE) is a national standardised assessment required for:

  • Medical licensure in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA)

  • Entry into residency and postgraduate training programmes

  • Employment within governmental and private healthcare sectors

It assesses whether a candidate possesses the minimum level of knowledge, clinical reasoning, and professional judgement expected of a safe, competent general physician.

Exam Authority

  • Conducted by: Saudi Commission for Health Specialties (SCFHS)

  • Exam format and blueprint are centrally regulated and periodically updated


Exam Format

  • Type: Computer‑based examination

  • Question style: Single Best Answer (SBA)

  • Number of questions: Approximately 300

  • Duration: 6 hours (usually divided into two sections)

  • Negative marking: None

Each question presents a clinical scenario followed by five plausible options. Only one option is considered the most appropriate answer.


SMLE Syllabus Overview

The SMLE syllabus reflects core undergraduate medical education with emphasis on conditions commonly encountered in general medical practice and emergency care.

Major Disciplines Covered

  1. Internal Medicine

  2. General Surgery & Surgical Subspecialties

  3. Paediatrics

  4. Obstetrics & Gynaecology

  5. Family Medicine & Primary Care

  6. Psychiatry & Behavioural Sciences

  7. Emergency Medicine

  8. Public Health, Ethics, and Professional Practice

Integration across disciplines is common, particularly in questions involving:

  • Acute presentations

  • Multisystem disease

  • Initial management and prioritisation


Topic and Marks Distribution (Approximate)

The following distribution reflects the SCFHS exam blueprint and trends observed across recent exam cycles. Exact percentages may vary slightly.

Internal Medicine – 30–35%

  • Cardiology

  • Respiratory medicine

  • Gastroenterology & hepatology

  • Endocrinology

  • Nephrology

  • Neurology

  • Infectious diseases

  • Rheumatology & haematology

Surgery – 20–25%

  • General surgery principles

  • Trauma and acute care

  • Orthopaedics

  • Urology

  • ENT

  • Ophthalmology

  • Basic neurosurgery & vascular surgery concepts

Paediatrics – 10–15%

  • Growth and development

  • Neonatology

  • Paediatric emergencies

  • Common childhood illnesses

Obstetrics & Gynaecology – 10–15%

  • Antenatal care

  • Labour and delivery

  • Obstetric emergencies

  • Gynaecological disorders

Family Medicine & Primary Care – 5–10%

  • Preventive medicine

  • Chronic disease management

  • Screening and vaccination

Psychiatry – 5%

  • Mood disorders

  • Psychosis

  • Substance misuse

  • Risk assessment

Public Health, Ethics & Professionalism – 5%

  • Biostatistics

  • Epidemiology

  • Patient safety

  • Medical ethics and Saudi healthcare regulations


Clinical Focus of the SMLE

The SMLE prioritises practical clinical decision‑making, particularly:

  • Initial assessment and stabilisation

  • Selection of appropriate investigations

  • First‑line management

  • Recognition of red‑flag conditions

  • When to refer or escalate care

Questions often test what should be done next, rather than definitive specialist management.


How to Use This Q‑Bank

This book is intended to be used in three phases:

  1. Learning Phase – Read explanations carefully, even for correct answers

  2. Revision Phase – Re‑attempt questions and focus on weak domains

  3. Exam Simulation Phase – Timed practice under exam conditions

Each explanation is written to be:

  • Clinically relevant

  • Exam focused

  • Free from unnecessary academic detail


Question and Answer Format Used in This Book

Each question will strictly follow this format:

  • Question: Clear clinical stem with relevant data

  • Options: Five realistic, exam‑standard distractors

  • Correct Answer: Explicitly stated

  • Explanation: Why this option is correct, based on standard clinical practice

  • Why Other Options Are Incorrect: Option‑by‑option clarification, including when those options would be correct in another context

This approach ensures not only knowledge acquisition, but also error recognition, which is critical for passing the SMLE.


Final Note

Success in the SMLE depends on structured preparation, repeated exposure to SBA questions, and deep understanding of common clinical scenarios. This book is designed to serve as a single, reliable companion throughout that journey.

Subsequent chapters will follow the syllabus structure and progressively increase in clinical complexity, closely reflecting the real examination.

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