Breaking into the Australian pharmacy system is no small feat. Especially when you’re starting from scratch in a new country, juggling a master’s degree, and working part-time just to keep the lights on. But that’s exactly what Megha, a PharmD graduate from Kerala, did and her story is worth every pharmacist reading this paying close attention.
The Beginning: A Bold Decision to Start Over
Megha completed her Doctor of Pharmacy from Mangalore and worked as a clinical pharmacist in India for about nine months. Anyone who has worked in that space knows the reality like long hours, demanding responsibilities, and a salary that rarely crosses ₹18,000 a month. It’s not sustainable, and it’s not what years of pharmacy education deserves.
So she made the move to Australia, enrolling in a Master of Health Management in Tasmania. That decision alone took courage. But what she did next made all the difference.
The Smart Move Most Pharmacists Skip
While studying for her master’s, Megha actively sought work as a pharmacy assistant. That first role? Just four hours a week. Most people would have walked away from that. She didn’t.
She showed up, proved herself, and gradually those four hours turned into 24 hours a week, all in the same pharmacy. This hands-on experience became the foundation that made her internship smoother than most.
“I started in a pharmacy where they offered me only 4 hours in a week. And gradually when I proved them that I was a true candidate, they gave me more number of hours.”
Here’s why working as a pharmacy assistant matters so much for internationally qualified pharmacists:
| What You Learn as a Pharmacy Assistant | Why It Matters for Registration |
| Dispensing prescriptions under supervision | Builds real workflow familiarity |
| Webster pack preparation | Directly tested competency |
| Stock and inventory management | Operational pharmacy understanding |
| Patient counselling support | Communication skills in Australian context |
The Australian pharmacy system is genuinely different from India’s. Megha put it plainly:
“Every pharmacist in India when they come here, they need to at least work as an assistant and have hands-on experience with the pharmacist.”
Even the most clinically sharp PharmD graduate needs time to understand how the workflow actually runs on the ground. Working as an assistant bridges that gap faster than any textbook can.
Cracking the OPRA Exam: What Actually Worked for Megha
The Overseas Pharmacist Readiness Assessment (OPRA) is the gateway exam every internationally qualified pharmacist must clear to practise in Australia. Megha started preparing just three months before the exam, which sounds risky, but her approach was focused. No scattered resources, no information overload. She committed to Academically’s OPRA Preparation course, attended recorded sessions when she couldn’t make live classes, and worked through revision PDFs and mock exams consistently.
Her honest take on daily study time?
“If you listen to the class, 2 hours a day, if you spend at least 2 hours a day, that’s actually quite enough for anyone to crack the OPRA exam.”
A few things Megha flagged about the actual paper:
- Microbiology and pharmacokinetics featured more heavily than she expected
- Pharmacotherapeutics questions were present but not dominant
- Calculations were fewer than anticipated, around six or seven
- Most questions were application-based, not rote recall
This is a useful reality check for anyone preparing. Don’t over-index on pharmacology alone. Microbiology and pharmacokinetics deserve serious attention. As Megha noted:
“It’s not very hard like we all think it is. It’s actually if you can learn, it’s manageable.”
The Bigger Message for Indian Pharmacists Abroad
There’s a pattern that plays out too often. An internationally qualified pharmacist arrives in Australia, struggles to find pharmacy work immediately, takes up something unrelated to pay bills, and slowly drifts away from the profession entirely. Years pass. The registration dream gets quieter.
Megha’s journey pushes back against that pattern directly. As she put it:
“Being able to work in your own profession is very important. Students find it hard to find a job in pharmacy and then they get deviated but staying in your field makes all the difference.”
Stay in your field, even if the entry point is a four-hour-a-week assistant role. The experience compounds. The familiarity compounds. And when you sit that exam, you’re not just prepared on paper, you’ve already been living the role.
For women especially, who often face additional pressure around timelines and expectations, Megha’s story is a straightforward reminder: the path doesn’t have to look perfect to work.
Final Thought
Megha’s story isn’t extraordinary because she had special advantages. It’s extraordinary because she made ordinary decisions consistently.
If you are an internationally qualified pharmacist reading this and wondering whether the investment of time, money, and energy is worth it, Megha’s answer is clear. The Australian pharmacy system rewards those who commit to it. The OPRA pathway is structured, it is transparent, and it is absolutely passable. What it requires from you is consistency, the right preparation, and the willingness to start even when the starting point feels small.
Your four hours a week could be the beginning of everything. If you are thinking about doing it, start today with us!