UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) Free Mock Test
UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) (Combined Medical Services) is part of India's Government Exams category, covering 5 topics. Kamiyab provides free UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) mock tests with no signup or payment — two modes: Quick Practice (10 questions in ~10 minutes for daily topic-wise revision) or Full Mock (up to 100 questions matched to the official exam pattern). Both include instant scoring and per-question explanations. Eligibility: MBBS. Aligned to the current 2026 official syllabus.
UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) mock test modes — at a glance
| Mode | Questions | Time | Best for | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quick Practice | 10 | ~10 minutes | Daily topic-wise warm-up | ₹0 (Free) |
| Full Mock | Up to 100 | ~2 hours | Pre-exam revision, full exam pattern | ₹0 (Free) |
Test mode
10 Qs · 10 minPick a topic
Start with General MedicineAbout UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services Examination)
The UPSC Combined Medical Services Examination, conducted in its current avatar since the late 1950s, is the principal recruitment gateway for MBBS-qualified doctors into central government medical services. UPSC notifies CMS roughly once a year on behalf of the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare and other cadre-controlling authorities, and the exam fills Group A and Group B medical officer posts across the Central Health Service (CHS) Junior Scale, Indian Railways Assistant Divisional Medical Officers, Indian Ordnance Factories and the New Delhi Municipal Council. Vacancies typically range from 700 to 900 posts per cycle, with Indian Railways and CHS absorbing the bulk of the recruits.
Service profile differs sharply across the four streams. CHS Junior Scale postings cover Safdarjung Hospital, RML Hospital, Lady Hardinge Medical College and other central institutions, with career progression as Junior Scale → Senior Scale → Specialist Grade II → Specialist Grade I and eventually heads of departments at central hospitals. Indian Railways places Assistant Divisional Medical Officers in the railway hospital network spanning all 16 zones — large divisional hospitals like Jagjivan Ram (Mumbai Central) or BR Singh (Sealdah) down to division-level health units. Indian Ordnance Factory medical posts cover defence factory townships, while NDMC postings cover Delhi municipal hospitals (East-MCD allocation has been reduced after the 2022 unification of Delhi's municipal bodies). The starting grade is Level 10 (₹56,100 entry pay) with rapid promotional movement based on Specialist Grade examinations.
Selection is a clean two-stage process. Stage 1 is a Computer-Based Test of two papers held on the same day, 120 questions per paper, 250 marks per paper, two hours per paper, with one-third negative marking. Paper I covers General Medicine and Paediatrics; Paper II covers Surgery, Gynaecology & Obstetrics, and Preventive & Social Medicine. Candidates who clear the CBT cut-off are called for Stage 2 — a 100-mark Personality Test conducted by a UPSC Board, assessing clinical reasoning, ethical judgement, awareness of national health programmes and suitability for government medical service. Final merit is 500 (CBT) + 100 (PT) = 600 marks. The shift to a fully computer-based test format was completed in the post-2014 reform cycle.
Conducted by: Union Public Service Commission (UPSC), Government of India
Eligibility
Standard candidate (open recruitment)
- Age:
- Must not have attained 32 years on 1st August of the year of examination. Category relaxations: SC/ST +5 years, OBC (non-creamy layer) +3 years, PwBD as per rules (+10/+13/+15), ex-servicemen as per Defence Service rules. Minimum age is effectively 21-22 years given MBBS completion timelines.
- Education:
- Must have passed the final professional MBBS examination (written and practical) from a college recognised by the National Medical Commission (formerly MCI). Candidates who have appeared in the final MBBS but whose results are awaited may apply provisionally. Compulsory rotating internship must be completed (or about to be completed) before joining; provisional registration with State/Central Medical Council is acceptable at the application stage, but full registration is mandatory before appointment.
- Nationality:
- Citizen of India, OR subject of Nepal/Bhutan, OR Tibetan refugee who came to India before 1 January 1962 with the intention of permanently settling, OR person of Indian origin migrated from specified countries (eligibility certificate from Government of India required for the last three categories).
In-service candidate (Central Health Service)
- Age:
- Different upper age limit applies for medical officers already serving in CHS — the relaxation is typically up to 40 years (as per the year's notification) for candidates applying through the in-service quota for specific CHS streams. Always check the current year's CMS notification for the exact ceiling.
- Education:
- Must already be a Central Health Service medical officer with the prescribed minimum service. The same MBBS + internship + registration requirements apply, plus a No Objection Certificate from the parent cadre.
- Nationality:
- Same as above. In-service candidates compete in a separate merit list/sub-list as defined by the notification and are governed by service rules of the parent cadre.
Exam Pattern
Stage-by-stage breakdown of the recruitment process.
Paper I — Computer-Based Test (General Medicine + Paediatrics)
- Mode
- Online CBT, single shift
- Sections
- Part A: General Medicine (incl. Dermatology and Psychiatry) · Part B: Paediatrics
- Questions
- 120 MCQs (Part A: 96 questions · Part B: 24 questions)
- Marks
- 250 marks (Part A: 200 marks · Part B: 50 marks)
- Duration
- 2 hours (10:00-12:00, schedule per UPSC notification)
- Negative marking
- One-third (0.33) of the marks assigned to a question deducted for each wrong answer; unattempted questions carry zero penalty
General Medicine is the single largest subject in the exam at 96 questions. Dermatology and Psychiatry are formally subsumed within General Medicine and contribute 4-6 questions between them in most cycles. Paediatrics — though only 24 questions — is the highest-yield-per-page section because the syllabus is narrow and Park + Nelson Essentials cover almost all of it.
Paper II — Computer-Based Test (Surgery + OBG + PSM)
- Mode
- Online CBT, single shift (held on the same day as Paper I)
- Sections
- Part A: Surgery (incl. ENT, Ophthalmology, Anaesthesia, Orthopaedics) · Part B: Gynaecology & Obstetrics · Part C: Preventive & Social Medicine
- Questions
- 120 MCQs (Part A: 40 · Part B: 40 · Part C: 40)
- Marks
- 250 marks (Part A and Part B contribute ~80 marks each, Part C ~90 marks — exact mark distribution varies cycle-to-cycle; verify the year's notification)
- Duration
- 2 hours (afternoon session)
- Negative marking
- One-third (0.33) of the marks assigned to a question deducted for each wrong answer
PSM is the highest-weight section in Paper II and is the single most score-defining subject across the entire CMS exam — over 30% of Paper II is straight Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine. Gynaecology & Obstetrics relies heavily on guideline-based questions (DIPSI, AUB-PALM-COEIN, MTP Amendment Act 2021). Surgery questions are spread thinly across general surgery, sub-specialties, ENT, ophthalmology, anaesthesia and orthopaedics — pattern recognition from past papers is essential.
Personality Test (Interview Board)
- Mode
- In-person interview at UPSC, Dholpur House, New Delhi
- Sections
- Personality, clinical reasoning, ethical judgement, awareness of national health programmes, current developments in medicine, suitability for service in remote/peripheral postings
- Questions
- Board-led structured discussion
- Marks
- 100 marks
- Duration
- Approximately 25-35 minutes per candidate
- Negative marking
- Not applicable
Candidates who clear the CBT cut-off (set category-wise by UPSC) are called for the Personality Test in a ratio of approximately 2:1 (PT calls vs vacancies). Final merit = CBT (500) + PT (100) = 600. Service allotment (CHS / Railways / IOFs / NDMC) is then made based on rank, medical category and candidate preference order submitted in the Detailed Application Form.
Syllabus
Tap any section to see the full list of subtopics.
General Medicine (Paper I, Part A — 96 questions / 200 marks)15 topics
- Cardiovascular: ischaemic heart disease (STEMI/NSTEMI diagnosis and management per AHA), hypertension (JNC 8 / ACC-AHA staging, antihypertensive drug classes), arrhythmias (AF, VT, heart blocks — ECG recognition), rheumatic heart disease and infective endocarditis (Duke criteria)
- Respiratory: bronchial asthma (GINA stepwise management), COPD (GOLD staging), community-acquired and hospital-acquired pneumonia, tuberculosis (NTEP regimens, MDR/XDR-TB, IGRA vs Mantoux), pulmonary embolism, ARDS (Berlin definition)
- Gastroenterology and hepatology: GERD, peptic ulcer disease and H. pylori eradication, inflammatory bowel disease (UC vs Crohn's), acute and chronic liver disease, viral hepatitis A-E, cirrhosis complications (variceal bleed, hepatic encephalopathy, SBP), acute pancreatitis (Atlanta classification)
- Endocrinology: diabetes mellitus (ADA diagnostic criteria, OHA classes, insulin regimens, DKA/HHS management), thyroid disorders (hypo/hyperthyroidism, thyroid storm, myxoedema coma), adrenal disorders (Cushing's, Addison's), pituitary axis basics
- Nephrology: AKI (KDIGO staging), CKD (eGFR staging, dialysis indications), glomerular diseases (nephritic vs nephrotic syndromes), urinary tract infections, electrolyte and acid-base disorders
- Neurology: stroke (ischaemic vs haemorrhagic, thrombolysis window), seizures and epilepsy (status epilepticus management), meningitis and encephalitis, peripheral neuropathies (GBS, diabetic neuropathy), headache disorders (migraine, cluster, tension), Parkinson's disease
- Infectious diseases: HIV/AIDS (NACO ART guidelines, opportunistic infections), malaria (P. falciparum vs vivax, NVBDCP treatment protocol), dengue (warning signs, fluid management), enteric fever, leptospirosis, COVID-19 (clinical course, management, vaccination)
- Haematology: anaemias (iron deficiency, megaloblastic, haemolytic — sickle cell, thalassaemia), leukaemia basics (AML/ALL/CML/CLL), lymphomas (Hodgkin staging), bleeding disorders (haemophilia, ITP, DIC)
- Rheumatology: rheumatoid arthritis (ACR criteria), SLE (SLICC criteria), seronegative spondyloarthropathies, gout and pseudogout, vasculitides (Takayasu, GPA, Kawasaki overview)
- Nutritional and metabolic disorders: protein-energy malnutrition, vitamin deficiencies (A, D, B-complex), obesity (BMI cut-offs for Indian population), metabolic syndrome
- Dermatology (subsumed in Medicine): psoriasis, eczema, leprosy (NLEP classification — paucibacillary vs multibacillary), scabies, common STIs
- Psychiatry (subsumed in Medicine): depression (DSM-5/ICD-10 criteria), schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders, substance use, suicide risk assessment
- Emergency medicine: poisoning (OP poisoning + atropine/PAM, paracetamol + NAC, snake bite + ASV), shock classification and management
- Drugs and prescribing: essential drugs list, drug-induced hepatitis, antimicrobial stewardship basics
- ECG, ABG, X-ray and basic ultrasound interpretation as relevant to clinical scenarios
Paediatrics (Paper I, Part B — 24 questions / 50 marks)15 topics
- Neonatology: APGAR scoring, Neonatal Resuscitation Programme (NRP) algorithm, neonatal jaundice (physiological vs pathological, Kramer staging, phototherapy thresholds), prematurity and low birth weight classification
- Growth and development: anthropometric measurements (weight, length, head circumference, MUAC), milestones (gross motor, fine motor, language, social), failure to thrive
- Immunisation: Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) schedule, Mission Indradhanush, vaccine cold chain, contraindications, AEFI classification
- Nutrition and PEM: kwashiorkor vs marasmus, IAP classification of malnutrition, severe acute malnutrition (SAM) management, complementary feeding, exclusive breastfeeding (WHO/IYCF)
- Common paediatric infections: acute diarrhoeal disease and ORS (WHO low-osmolarity ORS), zinc supplementation, acute respiratory infections (IMNCI classification), measles, mumps, rubella, chickenpox, pertussis
- Tuberculosis in children: NTEP paediatric regimen, BCG, Mantoux interpretation in children
- Congenital heart disease: acyanotic (VSD, ASD, PDA, coarctation) vs cyanotic (TOF, TGA), murmur recognition, neonatal cyanosis evaluation
- Paediatric haematology: nutritional anaemias, thalassaemia major (transfusion, chelation), sickle cell disease, ITP
- Genetic and chromosomal disorders: Down syndrome (trisomy 21 features), Turner, Klinefelter, inborn errors of metabolism overview (PKU, galactosaemia, MSUD)
- Paediatric neurology: febrile seizures, cerebral palsy classification, neural tube defects, developmental delay screening
- IMNCI and IMCI: triage assessment, danger signs in under-fives, treatment algorithms
- Adolescent health: RKSK programme, anaemia in adolescent girls, menstrual hygiene, mental health screening
- Paediatric emergencies: shock in children, status asthmaticus, DKA in children, accidental poisoning
- National programmes for child health: RBSK, JSSK, Janani Suraksha Yojana, POSHAN Abhiyaan, Anaemia Mukt Bharat
- Newborn screening: hearing screening, ROP screening, congenital hypothyroidism
Surgery (Paper II, Part A — 40 questions, includes ENT, Ophthalmology, Anaesthesia, Orthopaedics)15 topics
- Acute abdomen: appendicitis (Alvarado score), acute cholecystitis (Tokyo guidelines), intestinal obstruction (small bowel vs large bowel, sigmoid volvulus), perforation peritonitis
- Hernia: inguinal (direct vs indirect, NYHUS/Gilbert), femoral, umbilical, incisional, strangulation vs obstruction
- Breast: triple assessment (clinical + imaging + FNAC/core), breast cancer staging (TNM), benign breast disease (fibroadenoma, fibrocystic), Paget's disease
- Thyroid: solitary thyroid nodule workup, thyroid cancer (papillary, follicular, medullary, anaplastic), retrosternal goitre + Pemberton sign, thyroidectomy complications
- Urology: BPH (IPSS scoring, TURP), urolithiasis (calcium oxalate, struvite, uric acid), carcinoma prostate (Gleason scoring, PSA), bladder cancer, renal cell carcinoma
- Orthopaedics: fracture classification (Gustilo-Anderson for open fractures, Garden for femoral neck), osteoarthritis vs rheumatoid arthritis, osteomyelitis, congenital DDH, club foot (Ponseti method)
- Anaesthesia: airway assessment (Mallampati grading), ASA physical status grades, common induction agents (propofol, thiopentone, ketamine), inhalational agents, local anaesthetics (toxicity, max doses), spinal vs epidural anaesthesia
- ENT: otitis media (ASOM, CSOM tubotympanic vs atticoantral), otosclerosis, sinusitis, allergic rhinitis, tonsillitis indications for tonsillectomy, laryngeal cancer, head and neck cancers overview
- Ophthalmology: cataract (types, IOL), glaucoma (open-angle vs angle-closure), refractive errors (myopia, hypermetropia, astigmatism, presbyopia), diabetic retinopathy (NPDR/PDR), ROP screening, conjunctivitis types, NPCB programme
- Burns: Wallace rule of 9, Parkland formula for fluid resuscitation, burn depth assessment, escharotomy indications
- Trauma: ATLS primary and secondary survey, Glasgow Coma Scale, head injury management (CT indications, ICP), chest trauma (tension pneumothorax, flail chest, cardiac tamponade)
- Vascular surgery: peripheral arterial disease (Fontaine classification), DVT (Wells score, prophylaxis), varicose veins
- Hepatobiliary: gallstone disease, obstructive jaundice workup, pancreatic carcinoma (Whipple), liver abscess (amoebic vs pyogenic)
- Colorectal: haemorrhoids (grading), fissure-in-ano, fistula (Park's classification), carcinoma colon and rectum (Dukes, TNM)
- Skin and soft tissue: cellulitis, necrotising fasciitis, lipoma, sebaceous cyst, basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, melanoma (Breslow, Clark)
Gynaecology & Obstetrics (Paper II, Part B — 40 questions)16 topics
- Antenatal care: WHO 8-contact ANC schedule, booking visit investigations, supplementation (iron-folic acid, calcium), tetanus immunisation, ultrasound in pregnancy (NT scan, anomaly scan, growth scan)
- Gestational diabetes: DIPSI single-step 75g OGTT (Indian standard), IADPSG criteria, management (MNT + insulin), postpartum follow-up
- Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy: gestational hypertension, pre-eclampsia (severe features), eclampsia management (MgSO4 — Pritchard/Zuspan regimens), HELLP syndrome
- Antepartum haemorrhage: placenta praevia (types, management), abruptio placentae, vasa praevia
- Postpartum haemorrhage: causes (4 Ts — tone, trauma, tissue, thrombin), uterotonics (oxytocin, methergine, carboprost, misoprostol), B-Lynch suture, balloon tamponade, internal iliac ligation
- Operative obstetrics: vacuum vs forceps (indications, contraindications), Caesarean section indications (NICE classification 1-4), VBAC criteria
- Menstrual disorders: AUB-PALM-COEIN classification (FIGO), DUB, dysmenorrhoea, amenorrhoea (primary vs secondary workup)
- PCOS: Rotterdam criteria (2 of 3), insulin resistance, management (lifestyle, metformin, OCPs, letrozole for ovulation induction)
- Uterine fibroids: FIGO classification (0-8), red degeneration in pregnancy, myomectomy vs hysterectomy
- Cervical cancer: HPV vaccination (Cervavac, quadrivalent, nonavalent), VIA/VILI screening, Pap smear, colposcopy, FIGO staging, surgical vs radiation management
- Endometrial and ovarian cancers: risk factors, staging, screening limitations (CA-125)
- Contraception: Cu-T 380A, hormonal IUDs (LNG-IUS), combined OCPs, POPs, injectables (DMPA), emergency contraception (levonorgestrel, ulipristal, Cu-T as EC), sterilisation (tubectomy, vasectomy)
- Medical Termination of Pregnancy: MTP Amendment Act 2021 — up to 20 weeks on one doctor's opinion, 20-24 weeks for special categories (rape survivors, minors, foetal anomalies) on two doctors' opinion, foetal anomaly board for beyond 24 weeks
- Infertility: workup (semen analysis as per WHO 2021, tubal patency by HSG/SSG/laparoscopy, ovulation studies), ovulation induction (clomiphene, letrozole), ART overview (IUI, IVF, ICSI)
- Menopause: physiology, vasomotor symptoms, osteoporosis (T-score, DEXA), hormone replacement therapy risks and benefits
- Genital tract infections: vaginitis (candidial, bacterial, trichomonas), PID, syndromic management per NACO
Preventive & Social Medicine (Paper II, Part C — 40 questions, highest PSM weight in the exam)20 topics
- Concepts of health and disease: WHO definition, natural history of disease, levels of prevention (primordial, primary, secondary, tertiary), iceberg phenomenon
- Epidemiological measurements: incidence, prevalence (point vs period), attack rate, secondary attack rate, case fatality rate, mortality rates (crude, age-specific, cause-specific), standardisation
- Study designs: descriptive, cross-sectional, case-control (odds ratio), cohort (relative risk, attributable risk), RCT (allocation concealment, blinding, intention-to-treat), systematic review and meta-analysis
- Diagnostic test evaluation: sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, likelihood ratios, ROC curve, screening criteria (Wilson-Jungner)
- Biostatistics: mean/median/mode, standard deviation vs standard error, normal distribution, parametric vs non-parametric tests, t-test, chi-square, ANOVA, correlation and regression, p-value and confidence intervals
- Demography: NFHS-5 (2019-21) key indicators — Total Fertility Rate, Infant Mortality Rate, Maternal Mortality Ratio, Under-5 Mortality Rate, sex ratio at birth, contraceptive prevalence — and trends from NFHS-3/4 to NFHS-5
- Vital statistics: crude birth rate, crude death rate, age-specific rates, demographic transition, dependency ratio, Sample Registration System
- National Health Mission: NRHM → NHM evolution, ASHA, ANM, PHC/CHC/SDH hierarchy and IPHS standards, Health and Wellness Centres under Ayushman Bharat
- National disease control programmes: NTEP (Nikshay portal, BPaLM regimen), NLEP (leprosy elimination), NVBDCP (malaria, dengue, chikungunya, kala-azar, lymphatic filariasis, JE), NPCDCS (NCDs), NPCB&VI, NMHP, NTCP, IDSP/IHIP
- Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health: RCH-II, JSY, JSSK, LaQshya, SUMAN, RBSK, RKSK, POSHAN Abhiyaan, Anaemia Mukt Bharat, Mission Indradhanush 5.0
- Ayushman Bharat: Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY) — ₹5 lakh cover, eligibility via SECC, empanelment process, claim cycle; Health and Wellness Centres delivery of comprehensive primary healthcare
- Universal Immunisation Programme: full schedule (BCG, OPV, Hep B, Pentavalent, Rotavirus, PCV, fIPV, MR, JE, DPT booster, TT/Td), cold chain (ILR, deep freezer, vaccine carrier, ice pack), WHO EPI
- Occupational health: silicosis (mining, stone-cutting), byssinosis (cotton), pneumoconioses, lead poisoning (Burton's line, basophilic stippling), benzene, mercury, Factories Act 1948 medical provisions, ESI Act
- Environmental health: water quality (WHO/BIS standards, residual chlorine, MPN coliform), water purification (slow sand filter, rapid sand filter, household methods), sanitation (Swachh Bharat Mission, twin-pit latrine), air pollution (NAAQS, NCAP), solid waste management
- Nutrition: Recommended Dietary Allowances (ICMR-NIN 2020), balanced diet, food fortification (salt iodisation, oil + vitamin A/D, wheat flour + iron), ICDS scheme (Anganwadi services), Mid-Day Meal/PM-POSHAN, National Nutritional Anaemia Prophylaxis Programme
- Communicable disease epidemiology: chain of infection, modes of transmission, herd immunity threshold, R-naught, outbreak investigation steps, COVID-19 lessons (containment zones, contact tracing, vaccination drive)
- Non-communicable diseases: hypertension and diabetes screening under NPCDCS, cancer screening (oral, cervix, breast), tobacco control (COTPA 2003), mental health (Mental Healthcare Act 2017, District Mental Health Programme)
- Disaster management: NDMA structure, triage colour codes (red/yellow/green/black), START triage, mass casualty management, post-disaster epidemics
- Health planning and policy: National Health Policy 2017 targets, NMC Act 2019, Clinical Establishments Act, IPHS standards, health financing (out-of-pocket expenditure, PMJAY impact)
- International health: WHO structure and regions, SDG-3 targets and India's progress, Alma-Ata 1978 and Astana 2018 declarations, IHR 2005
Preparation Strategy
Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine is non-negotiable — read it cover to cover at least TWICE. Over 30% of Paper II is directly traceable to Park, and PSM is the single highest-yield subject in the entire exam relative to time invested. First reading should be slow and comprehensive (8-10 weeks); second reading is focused revision with margin notes on numbers, classifications and programme names. Carry the latest edition because programme names, NFHS indicators and immunisation schedules update frequently.
For General Medicine, do NOT read Harrison's cover to cover — that path destroys your timeline. Instead, cherry-pick high-yield chapters identified by past-paper analysis: cardiology (IHD, hypertension, arrhythmias), respiratory (asthma/COPD/TB/pneumonia) and endocrinology (DM and thyroid) account for nearly half of the General Medicine questions. Supplement with a fast MCQ revision book (Across Medicine or similar) for breadth coverage of less-frequent chapters.
Paediatrics should be done from Nelson Essentials of Pediatrics — NOT full Nelson, which is too dense and time-expensive for a 24-question section. Nelson Essentials + IAP guidelines for immunisation + Park's chapters on national child health programmes (RBSK, RKSK, JSSK, JSY, POSHAN) give you 90% coverage. Memorise the UIP schedule and IMNCI classification cold — these are recurring high-frequency questions.
For Surgery, Bailey & Love is selectively useful — read acute abdomen, hernia, breast, thyroid, urology, and the high-yield trauma/burns chapters carefully; skim the rest. SRB's Manual of Surgery is a denser Indian alternative many candidates prefer. For ENT, ophthalmology, anaesthesia and orthopaedics (which together share Part A with general surgery), use focused MBBS-final-year textbooks (Dhingra ENT, AK Khurana Ophthalmology, Maheshwari Orthopaedics, Ajay Yadav or Morgan & Mikhail for Anaesthesia) — but only the high-yield chapters.
Obstetrics & Gynaecology demands two parallel texts: DC Dutta (or Shaw's) for Obstetrics and Shaw's (or DC Dutta) for Gynaecology. Pair these with current guidelines — DIPSI for GDM, AUB-PALM-COEIN for menstrual disorders, FIGO fibroid classification, the MTP Amendment Act 2021 wording (24-week ceiling for special categories), Rotterdam criteria for PCOS, and the current HPV vaccination programme rollout. Guideline-quoting questions are extremely common in this section.
Stay current on MOHFW updates — read the latest National Health Policy targets, current NFHS-5 indicators (TFR, IMR, MMR, U5MR, institutional delivery, contraceptive prevalence), latest UIP changes (PCV expansion, fIPV, JE rollout, HPV in UIP), programme renaming (NRHM → NHM, RNTCP → NTEP, Ayushman Bharat HWC → comprehensive primary care), and major recent policy moves (NMC Act 2019, MTP Amendment 2021, Mental Healthcare Act 2017). The PSM paper is where currency matters most.
Final-year MBBS students CAN crack CMS — but only with disciplined Park reading from day one of preparation. DCH/MD candidates have a structural advantage in Paeds and General Medicine respectively, and MS candidates have it easy in Surgery, but they often under-prepare PSM and lose marks where the high-yield wins are. A focused 4-6 month preparation is sufficient if MBBS basics are intact; longer is better only if you start with Park and build outwards.
Solve at least 10 years of CMS past papers (UPSC publishes the question papers on its website) in timed mode in the final 8 weeks. Pattern recognition matters — UPSC repeats clinical scenarios, classifications and PSM numbers with high frequency. Use Kamiyab's Quick Practice for daily topic drilling (Park chapter-wise practice is especially high-yield) and Full Mock mode for two-paper-same-day endurance practice replicating the actual CBT format and one-third negative marking.
Plan the Personality Test alongside Stage 1 — not after results. Maintain a current-affairs notebook focused on health: latest NFHS data, recent disease outbreaks, MOHFW press releases, NMC notifications, Lancet/BMJ India-relevant studies. The Personality Test board frequently asks about preferred service (CHS vs Railways vs IOFs), willingness to serve in remote postings, and reasoning behind your service preference order — prepare a clear, honest, well-thought-out answer.
Recent Changes to Know
- Transition to a fully computer-based test format was completed in the post-2014 reform cycle — both papers are now online CBTs held on the same day, replacing the earlier pen-and-paper OMR format.
- MTP Amendment Act 2021 questions are now standard in both PSM and OBG — the 24-week ceiling for special categories (rape survivors, minors, foetal anomalies on board approval), single-doctor opinion up to 20 weeks, and the foetal anomaly board for beyond 24 weeks are recurring high-frequency questions.
- Ayushman Bharat (PMJAY + Health and Wellness Centres) has materially increased the weight of health-financing and primary-care delivery questions in PSM — expect at least 2-3 questions on PMJAY eligibility, HWC service package and comprehensive primary care.
- Post-COVID-19 epidemiology questions are now permanent — containment-zone strategy, contact tracing, R-naught and herd immunity calculations, vaccination platforms (CoWIN), and pandemic preparedness frameworks (IHR 2005) appear regularly.
- National Medical Commission Act 2019 (replacing the Medical Council of India), Mental Healthcare Act 2017, and the renaming of national programmes (RNTCP → NTEP, NRHM → NHM, NPHCE expansion) are all fair game and are tested explicitly with their year of enactment or revision.
Important Dates
- Notification
- UPSC notifies CMS once a year, typically in April. The notification publishes the year's vacancy break-up (CHS / Railways / IOFs / NDMC), age limit cut-off date, application window (usually 3 weeks) and the tentative exam date.
- Exam
- Stage 1 Computer-Based Test (both papers on the same day) is typically held in July of the same year. Personality Test (Stage 2) is scheduled between October and December after the CBT result is declared.
- Results
- CBT results are usually declared 4-6 weeks after the exam. Personality Test marks and the Final Result with service allotment are published 4-6 weeks after the Personality Test cycle ends, typically by late January or February of the following year.
All dates are indicative based on recent CMS cycles. The exact notification release, CBT date, PT schedule and Final Result depend on UPSC's annual calendar and may shift by a few weeks. Always check the official UPSC calendar at upsc.gov.in and the application portal at upsconline.gov.in for the current cycle's confirmed dates.
Widely-Used Reference Books
Popular books many aspirants use — pick what fits your level.
- Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Banarsidas Bhanot) — the single most important book for CMS; 30%+ of Paper II is directly Park-traceable. Read latest edition cover to cover, twice.
- Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine — cherry-pick by past-paper analysis; cardio, respiratory and endocrinology are the highest-yield chapters. Do not attempt cover-to-cover.
- Nelson Essentials of Pediatrics — not full Nelson. Covers 90% of Paeds requirements when paired with IAP/UIP guidelines.
- Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (selective chapters) and/or SRB's Manual of Surgery — acute abdomen, breast, thyroid, urology, trauma, burns are highest yield.
- Shaw's Textbook of Gynaecology and DC Dutta's Textbook of Obstetrics — pair these and supplement with FIGO/WHO guidelines + MTP Amendment Act 2021.
- Dr Sakshi Arora's UPSC CMS Self Assessment & Review — CMS-specific past-paper-style MCQs with explanations; useful for final-stage revision.
- Across (or similar) MBBS final-year MCQ booklets — for breadth coverage of less-frequent General Medicine chapters and rapid revision.
- UPSC CMS Previous Year Question Papers (10 years, downloadable from upsc.gov.in) — pattern recognition and timed-mode practice are mandatory.
UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) mock test — frequently asked questions
Is the UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) mock test on Kamiyab really free?
Yes, completely free. No signup, no payment and no hidden charges — every UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) practice test and full mock on Kamiyab is free to use.
Do I need to create an account to attempt the UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) mock test?
No. You can start any UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) quick practice or full mock without signing up. Just pick a topic and begin.
How many questions are there in the UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) mock test?
Quick Practice gives you a focused 10-question, ~10-minute test on a single topic. Full Mock is a longer paper of up to 100 questions built to match the UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) exam pattern and timing.
Which subjects and topics are covered for UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services)?
5 topics are covered for UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services), including General Medicine, Paediatrics, Surgery and more. Each topic can be practised on its own as a quick test or combined into a full-length mock.
Are the UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) questions reliable and up to date with the latest syllabus?
Quick Practice questions are hand-curated and kept aligned with the current official UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) syllabus, each with a short explanation. When the exam body revises the syllabus, the question bank is updated so you are not practising removed or out-of-syllabus topics.
Do I get the correct answers and explanations for UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services)?
Yes. After you submit the test, every question shows the correct option along with a short explanation, so you can review and fix weak areas immediately.
Will the UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) mock test work on a low-end phone or slow connection?
Yes. Kamiyab runs in any modern mobile browser with no app install. The timer, scoring and explanations all work on basic Android phones and on slow networks.
How should I use Kamiyab to prepare for UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services)?
Use Quick Practice daily for topic-wise revision, then take a Full Mock to simulate the real UPSC CMS (Combined Medical Services) timer and pressure. Read the explanations after every test and re-practise the topics where you score low.
10 minutes. 10 questions. Bas itna hi.
Koi signup nahin. Test khatam hone ke baad detailed analysis aur har question ka explanation milega.