MBBS final year — how do you balance surgery and medicine theory with OSCE prep?
Final year is absolutely brutal and I'm struggling to split my time between the written papers and the OSCE stations. The theory papers in surgery and internal medicine alone feel like they could each use 6 weeks of dedicated prep, but the OSCE practical component is where a lot of people actually fail in my batch. Our pass rate last year was around 78% overall but the OSCE failure rate was closer to 15%.
I've been doing about 4 hours of theory in the mornings and 1.5 hours of clinical skills practice in the afternoons. The problem is that theory reading often bleeds into the evening and I end up not touching clinical skills for 2–3 days at a stretch. Pharmacology for medicine is dense enough that I could spend a full month on it alone.
For the written sections, working through past papers from the last 5 years is way more effective than reading textbooks cover to cover. The question patterns repeat more than you'd expect — especially in pathology and pharmacology. I'm averaging about 65% on timed past paper attempts right now, which needs to come up to at least 72–75% before I feel ready to sit.
OSCE prep is something people consistently underinvest in until it's too late. I'd recommend at least 5 dedicated OSCE practice sessions with a partner in the last 3 weeks. The examiners notice hesitation and disorganized presentations more than minor factual gaps.
Pharmacology mnemonics are a lifesaver. I had about 200 drug facts to memorize and I built mnemonic chains for mechanism, side effects, and contraindications together. It took 2 weeks to build them but they held up under exam pressure.
Don't neglect community medicine and preventive health — they're easy marks if you prep them properly and most people treat them as an afterthought. I picked up almost all my buffer points from those sections when it mattered.
Past papers are the right call for the written component. I did 10 years of past surgery papers in the final 5 weeks and probably saw 40% of the actual exam content in those papers. Pathology spotters also repeat a lot — keep a running document of the common ones.