NARM CPM written exam – study timeline and how hard is the anatomy section really?
I'm a student midwife about 18 months into my apprenticeship and my preceptor thinks I should be ready to sit the NARM written exam within the next 6 months. I've been attending births regularly and I feel confident in my clinical skills, but the written exam is a different animal. I'm trying to build a realistic study schedule without burning out since I'm still doing active apprenticeship hours most weeks.
The section that worries me most is anatomy and physiology, specifically reproductive anatomy and neonatal physiology. I don't have a formal nursing or pre-med background, so I've had to build that knowledge from scratch during my apprenticeship. Most of what I know comes from midwifery-specific texts and what I've absorbed at births, not from a systematic anatomy course.
I've been told the exam is 300 questions and covers everything from antepartum care through postpartum management and newborn assessment. That's a massive range. How granular does it get on pharmacology? I'm most nervous about medications because my preceptor handles a lot of that and I'm less hands-on with it than I'd like to be before sitting.
The pharmacology section is thorough but not as detailed as a nursing exam. You're expected to know when to administer Pitocin versus Methergine for postpartum hemorrhage, appropriate GBS prophylaxis protocols, and the basics of neonatal resuscitation drugs. It's clinically focused, not pharmacokinetics-heavy.
I studied for about 5 months while still doing apprenticeship hours – usually 1 to 2 hours a day on my non-birth days. That worked well for me.
Your clinical experience is a real asset on the scenario-based questions. The exam writers want midwifery-appropriate decision making, not hospital-protocol answers. If you find yourself choosing between a midwifery response and a medicalized one, the midwifery approach is almost always what they're looking for.
Anatomy was harder than I expected for the same reason you mentioned. I used an online anatomy course to fill the gaps and gave myself 8 weeks just for that before moving on. Don't try to cram it into the last month – it doesn't stick that way.
Varney's Midwifery textbook is basically required reading for this exam. I'd also strongly recommend the NARM study guide because it maps pretty directly to the content outline. Some sections on the exam I'd never seen in any midwifery text, but most of it was covered if I'd read Varney's carefully enough.