I'm an internationally trained pharmacist preparing to sit the KAPS exam for the first time in about three months. I've been in pharmacy practice for six years but the Australian pharmaceutical regulatory context is new to me, so I'm treating this as a mix of knowledge review and new learning. My study schedule is about two hours a day, five days a week, which I plan to maintain for 10-11 weeks straight.
The calculations module is what I've been warned about most. I'm comfortable with compounding calculations and dosage conversions from practice, but I've read that the KAPS gets specific about Australian-context calculations — Schedule 8 quantity limits, pharmacy-specific formulation requirements. I'm less confident there than in pure pharmacokinetics questions.
Does the exam feel like it's testing clinical application or more memorization of regulatory detail? I want to calibrate whether I should be building case-based reasoning or drilling specific facts. Also, are the two sections — pharmacy practice and pharmaceutical sciences — roughly equal in difficulty, or does one typically give candidates more trouble?
I passed on my second attempt. The official KAPS preparation materials are worth going through cover to cover even if parts seem basic — the question style in the actual exam closely mirrors the sample questions they provide.
Calculations are present but not the majority. I'd say roughly 20-25% of the exam involves actual math. The bigger challenge is regulatory and clinical reasoning questions where the answer depends entirely on Australian-specific context.
The pharmaceutical sciences section was harder for me than practice — a lot of physical pharmacy and pharmacokinetics calculations I hadn't used since university. If you've been in a mostly clinical dispensing role, budget extra time for that section specifically.
Both sections are challenging but pharmacy practice trips up international candidates more because so much of it is Australia-specific — PBS, legislation, professional standards. You can't just rely on general pharmacy knowledge from your home country.