Practise for the AMC Clinical Exam with AI Voice Roleplay
You passed the MCQ. Now the real challenge starts.
The AMC Clinical Exam tests something textbooks cannot teach you: whether you can run a structured, safe, patient-centred consultation under time pressure. Sixteen assessed stations. Eight minutes each. Two minutes of reading time. A simulated patient waiting on the other side.
You already know the medicine. What most candidates struggle with is saying it out loud, in the right order, under the clock.
What the AMC Clinical Exam actually tests
The exam covers presentations across medicine, surgery, women's health, paediatrics, and mental health in both community and hospital settings. Each station focuses on one of four core tasks: history taking, clinical examination, diagnostic formulation, or management and counselling.
You need to pass 9 out of 14 scored stations to clear the exam. That sounds manageable until you realise each station is scored holistically. The examiner considers your clinical reasoning, communication skills, patient safety awareness, and overall consultation structure. Getting the diagnosis right is not enough if you cannot explain your reasoning clearly or manage the patient safely.
The exam fee is $3,000 for in-person sittings. Placements fill quickly, and the next scheduling window may be months away. Every attempt matters.
Why traditional preparation falls short
Most AMC Clinical Exam candidates prepare using some combination of textbook study, bridging courses, study groups, and watching demonstration videos. Each of these has a role, but none of them solve the core problem: you need to practise speaking.
Study groups are hard to organise, especially if you are working shifts or preparing from overseas. Bridging courses are expensive (often $2,000 or more) and run on fixed schedules. YouTube videos show you what a good consultation looks like, but watching is not doing. Reading a model answer in your head feels very different from delivering it aloud under time pressure.
The candidates who pass on their first attempt are usually the ones who found ways to practise the actual skill the exam tests: running a live consultation from start to finish.
How BlitzBuddy helps you practise
BlitzBuddy is an AI voice practice partner built specifically for the AMC Clinical Exam. You pick a station, read the brief, and then talk through the consultation with an AI patient that responds to your questions in real time.
The AI patient behaves like a real patient. It only reveals information you ask for. It does not volunteer symptoms you have not explored. It responds in short, natural sentences, not medical paragraphs. If you forget to ask about allergies, it will not remind you.
After each session, you receive a detailed assessment scored against AMC assessment domains. You can see exactly where you performed well and where you dropped marks. Then you can watch a gold-standard coaching demo that shows how an ideal candidate would approach the same station.
Every station is created and validated by a doctor who sat the AMC Clinical Exam herself. The content reflects what the exam actually tests, not generic OSCE material adapted from another country's curriculum.
Practise on your schedule
BlitzBuddy is available 24/7. No study group coordination. No waiting for a tutor booking. No embarrassment in front of peers when you stumble through a station for the first time.
Practise at midnight after a hospital shift. Practise on a Sunday morning before the kids wake up. Practise the same station five times until your opening feels automatic.
The exam rewards fluency, and fluency comes from repetition in a realistic setting.
Start practising today
Try a free practice station and see how BlitzBuddy works. No credit card required. Pick a station, talk to the AI patient, and get your first scored assessment in under 10 minutes.