"The good physician treats the disease. The great physician treats the patient who has the disease." - Sir William Osler
Osler's words have endured for over a century because they capture something essential about medicine. True clinical competence is never just about rote learning books of pathology or pharmacology. It lives in the intersection of knowledge, judgement, and lived experience. When Dr. Priti sat down to face the Australian Medical Council (AMC) MCQ exam in May 2026, it was precisely that intersection that carried her through. She received the results on June 5th, 2026 with a "PASS" remark and a score of 251.
Dr. Ssnegdha Sharma (Academic Head, Medical Courses, Academically) had a tete-a-tete on the AMC exam results declaration day to uncover the strategies Dr. Priti adopted to pass the exam in just 2 months that too, while managing a full time job. Is it sheer luck or hard work? Let's see.
How did the AMC Pathway Start?
Dr. Priti's journey with AMC pathway began in September the previous year. She enrolled into Academically, received her study materials, and started working through the course notes. But life, as it often does, had other plans. Work commitments mounted. The exam date kept getting pushed. May became June. At one point, when a technical glitch on the AMC booking portal prevented her from confirming her slot, she briefly considered requesting a partial refund and walking away entirely.
Her family said no.
"My parents told me: leave your job for two months, give 100% concentration. Just go for it."
She didn't leave her job. But she went for it anyway.
AMC Exam Preparation Strategy for Full Time Doctors
What Dr. Priti built over the next eight weeks was less a study plan and more a clinical triage of her own preparation. She ruthlessly prioritised what would yield the most on exam day, and consciously deprioritising everything else.
Month One: Theory, But Only the Core
The first month was dedicated to foundational revision across the high-weightage subjects:
- Medicine (CVS, rheumatology, orthopaedics, full PDFs)
- Gynaecology and Obstetrics (complete PDF, one full read-through)
- Paediatrics
- Psychiatry
Her approach to theory was deliberate and restrained. She read once, highlighted the essentials, and moved on. No second revision of theory. The goal was to build enough clinical scaffolding to make MCQ practice meaningful, not to achieve encyclopaedic recall.
Month Two: MCQs, and Nothing But
The second month was almost entirely MCQ-driven. She started at 200 questions a day and progressively pushed that to 300–400. By the final weeks, she was studying 15 to 16 hours daily.
For shorter subjects, ethics, emergency medicine, ENT, ophthalmology, she skipped deep theory entirely and went straight to MCQ banks. Her logic was sound. These subjects test pattern recognition and clinical judgement rather than dense theoretical recall, and the MCQ format trains both far more efficiently than re-reading notes.
The Exam Week Recall Rule
One of the most practically useful pieces of advice she shared: do your exam week recall seriously. Around 80 to 90% of the topics she encountered in the actual exam had come up during that final revision window, not the exact questions, but the clinical scenarios and concepts being tested. The AMC rarely repeats a question stem, but it returns to the same core topics consistently.
What Happens During the AMC Exam? Let's Know it From the Candidate Herself
Dr. Priti's breakdown of her exam experience offers a useful map for aspirants:
| Subject Area | What to Expect |
| Paediatrics | 10–15 questions; high yield, worth thorough preparation |
| Ethics | Unpredictable volume; she got far more than expected; MCQ practice is the only reliable prep |
| Psychiatry | Featured heavily; clinical scenario-based |
| Cardiovascular | 2–3 ECG interpretation questions |
| Ophthalmology | 2–3 picture-based questions (conjunctivitis, red eye photographs) |
| Picture-based overall | 8–10 image questions across the paper |
The dominant lesson is the AMC is a clinician's exam. It tests how you think through a scenario, not how many eponyms you can recall. Learning to eliminate wrong options, especially between two closely-spaced, both-plausible answers, is a skill the MCQ practice actively builds, and it is non-negotiable.
So Is it Luck or Hard Work? What does AMC Exam Reward the Most?
Dr. Priti's own first instinct was to attribute her result to luck. Dr. Ssnegdha Sharma attributed it to her hard work. And she's right. She says:
" Being a doctor means you've already cleared some of the most competitive filters in your country's education system. You are the cream of all professionals. Your years of clinical exposure, the ward rounds, the overnight calls, the diagnostic reasoning sharpened by a thousand bedside presentations. That knowledge doesn't switch off when you sit an exam. What the AMC tests is whether you can access that knowledge under structured, time-bound conditions. Dr. Priti could. That's preparation, strategy and definitely not luck. " - Dr. Ssnegdha Sharma
What's Next After AMC CAT MCQ Part I?
With her AMC Part 1 cleared, Dr. Priti is now targeting two parallel tracks. She's now applying for medical jobs in Australia while simultaneously beginning preparation for AMC Part II (the Clinical OSCE). Her plan is to enter the system, get into a hospital, absorb the Australian clinical environment and complete the final step from within it.
We'd call it smart, pragmatic, and exactly the kind of adaptive thinking the Australian healthcare system tends to reward.
Why Choose Academically for AMC Exam Coaching?
Dr. Priti's success was built on a foundation she started constructing at Academically. The AMC exam preparation course is designed specifically for international medical graduates (IMGs) who want to clear Part 1 on the first attempt and move to Australia with confidence.
What the course includes:
- 100+ hours of live and recorded AMC video tutorials
- Study handouts and structured PDFs covering all high-yield subjects
- Adaptive AI-driven mock tests that mirror the CAT exam format
- Live classes and recorded sessions for flexible access
- Feedback sessions with experienced AMC faculty
- A final AMC grand test for full-exam simulation
- Exclusive tips on MCQ strategy, including answer elimination, clinical scenario reasoning, and exam week recalls
Why the AMC pathway makes sense?
- No residency match required. You can begin working after clearing both parts
- 5,000+ active doctor vacancies in Australia right now
- Average annual salary for registered doctors: AUD $400,000 (which is ₹2 crore+ per year)
- 185,000+ skilled worker visas issued annually
- A direct route to Permanent Residency, especially through rural placements
- Shorter and significantly less expensive than USMLE (3–5+ years, USD $25,000+ + H1B Visa issues)
The AMC MCQ exam is a 150-question, 3.5-hour Computer Adaptive Test. Passing score is above 250 on a 500-point scale. Pearson VUE centres for the exam are available across India, in Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Mumbai, and New Delhi.
To Conclude with...
Dr. Priti's story isn't about a shortcut. 2 months of 15–16 hour study days, while working, is anything but easy. What her story demonstrates is that the AMC is not difficult as a licensure exam as it is touted to be. The right clinical background, the right strategy, the right materials, and the discipline to crack the exam on the first attempt is needed.
Remember, she didn't wait for the perfect window. She made a two-month window work. If you're an international medical graduate sitting on a deferred AMC booking or still weighing whether to begin, consider this your green flag.
Take the first step toward your Australian medical career. All the best!