Time & Resource Management – Introduction (MSRA SJT)

Time & Resource Management

Time and Resource Management MSRA

This guide introduces the critical domain of Time and Resource Management MSRA scenarios. In the Professional Dilemmas paper, you are tested on your ability to juggle competing clinical demands without compromising patient safety or your own wellbeing.

🎥 Video Lesson (YouTube)

🎧 Podcast Lesson (Spotify / Apple / Amazon)

Managing time and resources is one of the most exam-relevant SJT domains, because the MSRA often asks you to prioritise competing tasks, handle pressure safely, and balance service demands with professionalism.

Poor time management in the exam usually shows up as:
❌ unsafe delays
❌ ignoring urgent concerns
❌ trying to “do everything yourself”
❌ inefficient multitasking
❌ failing to ask for help
❌ misjudging what is truly time-critical

This section teaches you how to think like a safe junior doctor who can stay organised, work under pressure, and prioritise in a way that protects patients, maintains fairness, and stays aligned with GMC Good Medical Practice.


What this section covers

You’ll learn the core behaviours tested across:

  • Prioritising Clinical Tasks

  • Working Under Time Pressure

  • Managing Multiple Demands

  • Using Limited Resources Effectively

  • Balancing Clinical & Non-Clinical Workload

Each subsection includes:
✔ high-yield exam rules
✔ safe-vs-unsafe actions
✔ common traps the MSRA uses
✔ mini-frameworks that make prioritisation instinctive
✔ wording patterns that reliably score high
✔ real-world examples that mirror exam scenarios


🎯 MSRA Exam Mindset for Time & Resource Management

1. Safety comes first

Any task that involves risk, deterioration, A–E concerns, safeguarding, or medication errors → prioritise immediately.

2. Don’t delay urgent tasks to finish admin

Admin, emailing, forms, discharge summaries, notes, routine tasks = lower priority.

3. Ask for help early

The SJT rewards shared workload, delegation, escalation, and using the MDT effectively.

4. One safe action is better than doing everything poorly

The exam punishes multitasking when it compromises safety.

5. Communicate workload transparently

Let seniors & colleagues know if capacity is stretched.


🔥 High-Yield Mini-Framework (PEARL-P)

For prioritising your workload safely:

P – Patient safety (immediate risk first)
E – Escalate when overloaded or concerned
A – Allocate tasks to the right person (delegation)
R – Resources (use MDT, guidelines, equipment effectively)
L – Legal & ethical duties (capacity, consent, documentation)
P – Protect your wellbeing (fatigue, burnout, unsafe staffing)

This framework covers 90% of MSRA “prioritisation” questions.


⚠️ Common SJT Traps

Be mindful of these low-scoring behaviours:

  • “I’ll just finish my list before seeing the unwell patient.”

  • Ignoring bleeps or urgent requests because you’re busy.

  • Trying to manage everything yourself instead of delegating/escalating.

  • Staying late regularly instead of raising workload concerns.

  • Prioritising efficiency over safety.

  • Assuming seniors will “be annoyed” if you escalate.


📌 Typical Exam Scenarios You’ll See

  • Multiple unwell patients → choose the highest risk first.

  • Busy ward round + urgent bleep → interrupt safely.

  • Overwhelming workload → inform senior + reprioritise tasks.

  • Running late for clinic → communicate early, not late.

  • Limited staff/resources → reallocate tasks fairly and safely.

These all map back to GMC expectations around competence, safety, communication, and honesty.


🧭 Why this matters clinically

Good time management protects patients, prevents burnout, and maintains trust in the team.
The SJT isn’t testing speed — it’s testing safe, fair, prioritised decision-making.

Q: Why is time and resource management important for the MSRA SJT?
It helps you prioritise safely, manage workload pressures, and make decisions aligned with GMC Good Medical Practice.

Q: How should I prioritise tasks in MSRA scenarios?
Always address immediate safety concerns first, then escalate, delegate, and reallocate tasks as needed.

Q: What behaviours score highly in time-management questions?
Escalation, using the MDT, managing risk promptly, clear communication, and working within competence.

Q: What common mistakes lower scores?
Ignoring deteriorating patients, delaying escalation, multitasking unsafely, and hiding workload pressures.

Further resources:

📖 References