All Practice Exams

100+ Free DCSRH Practice Questions

Pass your CoSRH Diploma (DCSRH) exam on the first try — instant access, no signup required.

✓ No registration✓ No credit card✓ No hidden fees✓ Start practicing immediately
Not publicly published by CoSRH on reviewed DCSRH pages and guides. Pass Rate
100+ Questions
100% Free
1 / 100
Question 1
Score: 0/0

A patient reports pain with penetration and avoids sex. What is the best first consultation approach?

A
B
C
D
to track
Same family resources

Explore More MRCOG Obstetrics & Gynaecology Exams

Continue into nearby exams from the same family. Each card keeps practice questions, study guides, flashcards, videos, and articles in one place.

2026 Statistics

Key Facts: DCSRH Exam

50

OTA SBA questions

CoSRH OTA guide

60 minutes

OTA duration

CoSRH OTA guide

60%

OTA pass mark

CoSRH OTA guide

5

Summative Clinical Assessments

CoSRH DCSRH page

GBP 331

DCSRH application fee

CoSRH fees for 2026

2 years

DCSRH completion window

CoSRH DCSRH page

DFSRH is a legacy source label for the current CoSRH Diploma (DCSRH). CoSRH states that the Diploma includes an Independent Learning Portfolio, a 50-question one-hour Online Theory Assessment, five Summative Clinical Assessments and an Assessment Half Day. The OTA guide confirms the OTA is open-book, online, has 50 five-option SBA questions and a 60% pass mark. The 2026 fees page lists a GBP 331 application fee and GBP 142 Diplomate membership; an AHD event page lists GBP 343 for a virtual AHD when charged separately.

Sample DCSRH Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your DCSRH exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1A 27-year-old asks why a levonorgestrel intrauterine device can reduce menstrual bleeding. Which explanation is most accurate?
A.Local progestogen exposure thins the endometrium and reduces endometrial proliferation
B.It blocks follicle-stimulating hormone in every cycle
C.It permanently destroys the basal endometrium
D.It increases ovarian oestrogen production
Explanation: The LNG-IUD mainly acts locally on the endometrium, causing endometrial suppression and often lighter bleeding.
2A patient tracking cycles asks when ovulation usually occurs in a regular 28-day cycle. Which timing is the best approximation?
A.On the first day of menstrual bleeding
B.About 14 days before the next menstrual period
C.Exactly 7 days after bleeding stops in all cycles
D.Only after a positive pregnancy test
Explanation: Ovulation is better estimated relative to the next period; the luteal phase is usually about 14 days.
3During contraception counselling, a patient asks why cervical mucus changes matter. Which hormone effect is most relevant to progestogen-only contraception?
A.Progestogen makes cervical mucus thinner for sperm transport
B.Progestogen directly dissolves ova after ovulation
C.Progestogen thickens cervical mucus and reduces sperm penetration
D.Progestogen causes permanent tubal occlusion
Explanation: A major contraceptive action of progestogen-only methods is thickening cervical mucus, reducing sperm entry.
4A learner asks which structure is the usual site of fertilisation. What is the best answer?
A.The endocervical canal
B.The lower vagina
C.The endometrial cavity after implantation
D.The fallopian tube, usually the ampullary region
Explanation: Fertilisation usually occurs in the fallopian tube before the embryo reaches the uterine cavity.
5A patient using combined hormonal contraception asks why ovulation is suppressed. Which mechanism is central?
A.Negative feedback on gonadotrophin secretion reduces the luteinising hormone surge
B.Permanent destruction of ovarian follicles
C.Direct closure of the cervical os
D.Selective killing of sperm after intercourse
Explanation: Combined hormonal contraception suppresses hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian signalling and prevents the LH surge needed for ovulation.
6A 45-year-old with perimenopausal symptoms asks why cycle timing is less predictable. Which physiological change is most relevant?
A.The cervix stops producing mucus in every cycle
B.Fluctuating ovarian follicular activity and hormone levels make cycles more variable
C.The ovaries immediately stop all hormone production at age 45
D.Ovulation becomes fixed to day 14 in every cycle
Explanation: Perimenopause is characterised by variable ovarian activity, fluctuating hormones and irregular bleeding patterns.
7A 35-year-old requests combined hormonal contraception and reports migraine with visual aura. What is the safest counselling point?
A.Start combined contraception because age is under 40
B.Use combined contraception only on headache-free days
C.Avoid combined hormonal contraception and discuss safer alternatives
D.Prescribe a higher oestrogen dose to prevent aura
Explanation: Migraine with aura is an important stroke-risk consideration and combined hormonal contraception is not appropriate.
8A patient wants contraception and takes carbamazepine for epilepsy. What should the DCSRH candidate prioritise?
A.Ignore medication because contraception is locally acting in all methods
B.Offer a standard combined pill without discussion
C.Advise condoms are contraindicated with antiepileptic medicines
D.Assess enzyme-inducing drug interaction and offer methods not reduced by enzyme induction
Explanation: Enzyme-inducing medicines can reduce effectiveness of some hormonal methods, so medication history changes method choice.
9A patient with previous venous thromboembolism asks for the combined pill. What is the best next step?
A.Explore safer non-oestrogen options and consider specialist advice where needed
B.Prescribe combined contraception because VTE was in the past
C.Increase oestrogen dose to stabilise bleeding
D.Avoid discussing long-acting reversible contraception
Explanation: Previous VTE is a major risk factor for oestrogen-containing contraception and requires safer alternatives.
10A new patient asks for emergency contraception after unprotected sex. Which history item is essential before recommending a method?
A.The patient’s preferred pharmacy brand only
B.Timing of each episode of unprotected intercourse and cycle details
C.The partner’s occupation
D.Whether the patient has ever used tampons
Explanation: Emergency contraception choice depends on timing of UPSI, cycle timing, pregnancy possibility, eligibility and ongoing contraception needs.

About the DCSRH Exam

The source row uses the legacy DFSRH title and Faculty naming. CoSRH now publishes the current official qualification as the CoSRH Diploma (DCSRH). The Diploma is a portfolio-based SRH qualification for registered UK and Irish healthcare professionals, with an Online Theory Assessment of 50 five-option SBA questions in 60 minutes, five Summative Clinical Assessments and an Assessment Half Day with written and station-based assessment. This bank keeps the source ID to close the missing-exam row but normalizes display metadata to DCSRH.

Assessment

Portfolio-based Diploma with Independent Learning Portfolio, Online Theory Assessment, five Summative Clinical Assessments and Assessment Half Day.

Time Limit

OTA is 60 minutes. AHD includes a 1-hour written assessment plus four stations; a 2026 virtual AHD event is scheduled for 09:00-13:00.

Passing Score

OTA pass mark is 60%; CoSRH does not publish a single overall Diploma pass mark for all portfolio and AHD components on reviewed public pages.

Exam Fee

GBP 331 DCSRH application fee; AHD may be GBP 343 if not provided locally; GBP 142 Diplomate membership after completion (College of Sexual and Reproductive Healthcare)

DCSRH Exam Content Outline

6/100 practice questions

Basic Anatomy and Physiology

Reproductive anatomy, ovulation, cervical mucus, endometrium and basic contraceptive physiology.

8/100 practice questions

Health History and Risk Assessment

Medical, medication, pregnancy and sexual history, UKMEC reasoning and risk assessment.

18/100 practice questions

Contraceptive Choices

Shared decision-making across oral, injectable, implant, intrauterine, barrier, natural and permanent methods.

8/100 practice questions

Emergency Contraception

Copper IUD, oral EC, quick starting, repeat UPSI, vomiting, follow-up testing and trauma-informed EC care.

10/100 practice questions

Contraception: Managing Side Effects and Complications of Use

Bleeding, pain, infection, neurovascular symptoms, VTE red flags and procedure complications.

6/100 practice questions

Planning Pregnancy

Preconception counselling, fertility return, folic acid, chronic disease, medicines and immunisation.

7/100 practice questions

Unintended Pregnancy and Abortion

Non-directive options counselling, abortion pathways, contraception after abortion and reproductive coercion.

5/100 practice questions

Early Pregnancy

Pregnancy testing, ectopic red flags, pregnancy of unknown location and IUD pregnancy management.

10/100 practice questions

Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs)

Sexual history, testing, PID, chlamydia, gonorrhoea, HIV PEP, partner notification and self-sampling.

8/100 practice questions

Needs of Specific Groups

Inclusive and accessible SRH care for adolescents, postpartum patients, trans patients, disabled patients and perimenopause.

6/100 practice questions

Adult and Child/Young Person Safeguarding

Child and adult safeguarding, reproductive coercion, domestic abuse, FGM and confidentiality limits.

4/100 practice questions

Psychosexual Medicine

Pain, desire, vaginismus, sexual wellbeing and referral or signposting.

4/100 practice questions

Cervical Screening

Programme eligibility, HPV results, symptomatic bleeding and inclusive screening advice.

How to Pass the DCSRH Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: OTA pass mark is 60%; CoSRH does not publish a single overall Diploma pass mark for all portfolio and AHD components on reviewed public pages.
  • Assessment: Portfolio-based Diploma with Independent Learning Portfolio, Online Theory Assessment, five Summative Clinical Assessments and Assessment Half Day.
  • Time limit: OTA is 60 minutes. AHD includes a 1-hour written assessment plus four stations; a 2026 virtual AHD event is scheduled for 09:00-13:00.
  • Exam fee: GBP 331 DCSRH application fee; AHD may be GBP 343 if not provided locally; GBP 142 Diplomate membership after completion

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

DCSRH Study Tips from Top Performers

1Use the 13 CoSRH DCSRH learning outcomes to structure revision and avoid focusing only on contraceptive products.
2Practise OTA questions as clinical decisions with eligibility, pregnancy risk, STI risk and safeguarding built into the stem.
3Review current CoSRH guidance, especially UKMEC, emergency contraception, quick starting and method-specific guidance.
4Prepare for the AHD by turning facts into patient-centred consultation explanations, not only memorised lists.
5Keep portfolio evidence and SCA preparation aligned with real clinical encounters and trainer feedback.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is DFSRH still the official current name?

The missing row uses DFSRH, but CoSRH now publishes the qualification as CoSRH Diploma (DCSRH). This page keeps the source ID and normalizes display metadata to DCSRH.

What is the DCSRH OTA format?

The CoSRH OTA guide states that the OTA is an open-book online assessment with 50 five-option single-best-answer questions and a 60-minute time limit.

What other DCSRH assessments are required?

CoSRH states that the Diploma includes the Independent Learning Portfolio, OTA, five Summative Clinical Assessments and an Assessment Half Day with a written assessment plus stations.

How much does DCSRH cost in 2026?

The 2026 fees page lists GBP 331 to apply, including a GBP 75 non-refundable admin fee, plus Diplomate membership after completion. The AHD may cost GBP 343 if not provided locally.

Who can apply for DCSRH?

CoSRH welcomes doctors, nurses, midwives, pharmacists, physician associates and other UK or Irish registered healthcare professionals working in primary care, community or integrated services, provided they meet the entry requirements.