15Oct

Communication and Empathy in the AMC Clinical Exam

When most doctors start preparing for the AMC Clinical exam, they focus heavily on content — guidelines, differentials, management plans, and structured communication frameworks. But what often gets overlooked is how we communicate.

Time and again, I’ve seen candidates try to show empathy by mechanically saying, “I’m sorry to hear that,” to every piece of bad news or distress. The intention is good — but the delivery often feels hollow. The AMC exam isn’t assessing your ability to memorise empathy phrases; it’s assessing whether you can make your patient feel heard, understood, and cared for.

Why Communication Matters More Than Perfect Answers

The AMC Clinical exam is designed to evaluate not only your medical knowledge but also your ability to connect with patients. The examiner is observing how you listen, respond, and adapt to what the patient is saying.

You can have the perfect differential diagnosis and management plan — but if your tone is rushed, your body language closed off, or your words sound rehearsed, it won’t land well. Patients in Australia value a doctor who shows genuine interest, patience, and compassion.

Good communication isn’t about talking more — it’s about listening better

The Problem with “Robotic Empathy”

“I’m sorry to hear that” is the most overused phrase in the AMC exam. Candidates sometimes say it reflexively — almost like a verbal tick — even when it doesn’t fit the context.

Imagine a patient saying, “My mother passed away last year,” and the candidate blurts out, “I’m sorry to hear that,” before quickly moving back to their checklist. That’s performative empathy — not authentic empathy.

Real empathy requires you to pause, acknowledge the emotion, and give it space. A simple silence, a soft nod, or a calm “That must have been very difficult for you” carries far more meaning than a dozen automatic phrases.

How to Show Real Empathy

Empathy is not scripted; it’s sensed. Here’s how you can demonstrate it naturally in your AMC stations:

1. Listen before responding. Don’t interrupt. Let the patient finish speaking before you jump in with advice or reassurance.
2. Use the patient’s words. Reflect their language: “You mentioned you’ve been feeling really tired lately — that must be hard, especially with young children at home.”
3. Show presence through body language. Maintain gentle eye contact, lean forward slightly, and keep your arms uncrossed. These non-verbal cues show attentiveness.
4. Match your tone to the patient’s emotion. Empathy is conveyed more through tone than words. A calm, steady voice builds trust instantly.
5. Be culturally aware. What feels respectful in one culture can feel distant or inappropriate in another. For Australian patients, warmth and straightforward communication go a long way.

The Australian Context: What Examiners Are Really Looking For

In Australia, the medical consultation model is highly patient-centred. This means the focus isn’t just on what’s wrong with the patient but on how their illness affects their life, emotions, and relationships.

When examiners assess you, they’re silently asking:
– Did this doctor make the patient feel comfortable sharing their story?
– Did they acknowledge the patient’s emotions appropriately?
– Did they empower the patient to participate in their care?
That’s why empathy isn’t a “soft skill” in the AMC — it’s a core clinical skill

The “Float and Dive” Approach

At Oyamed, I teach a structured yet flexible technique called “Float and Dive.” You start by floating with the presenting complaint — allowing the patient to speak and share their concerns — then you dive deeper into potential differentials, psychosocial factors, and red flags.

This approach prevents the interaction from becoming a mechanical checklist. You’re listening, thinking, and responding in real time — just like in real clinical practice. It helps you sound natural, curious, and genuinely engaged.

Example: Superficial vs Genuine Empathy

Scenario: A patient presents with ongoing fatigue.

Superficial response:
“I’m sorry to hear that. Let’s check your blood tests and see what’s wrong.”

Genuine empathy:
“That sounds really exhausting, especially if it’s been affecting your daily routine. Let’s figure out what’s going on together.”

The difference is subtle but powerful. The second response doesn’t just acknowledge the symptom — it validates the impact on the patient’s life and invites collaboration

How Oyamed Helps You Master Authentic Communication

At Oyamed, our goal isn’t just to help you pass the AMC Clinical exam — it’s to help you become a doctor who communicates with confidence, empathy, and clarity.

Through one-on-one coaching, spontaneous roleplays, and personalised feedback, we help you:
– Develop natural, authentic consultation flow.
– Build rapport quickly and consistently across all station types.
– Learn how to adapt your communication for anxious, angry, or emotional patients.
– Understand what examiners are actually scoring when they assess “empathy.”

Our students often tell us that this training doesn’t just change how they perform in the exam — it transforms how they communicate with patients in real life.

Communication Is Confidence

True confidence in the AMC Clinical exam doesn’t come from memorising phrases or scripts — it comes from understanding your patient. When you communicate with empathy and clarity, everything else — diagnosis, management, structure — falls naturally into place.

Empathy isn’t about “sounding nice.” It’s about connecting deeply. And when you connect, you heal — not just your patients, but your own confidence as a doctor too.

Ready to Transform Your Communication Skills?

If you’re preparing for the AMC Clinical exam and want to move beyond scripted phrases to authentic, examiner-level communication — we’re here to guide you.

👉 Book a free consultation with Oyamed today and take your first step from “One day I’ll pass the AMC” to “Day one of your success story.”

16Sep

Your Dream Isn’t Over: Getting Back on Track After failing AMC exams

When doctors come to Australia, they arrive with dreams – of hospitals, clinics, white coats, and hearing patients calling them “doctor” again.

But the reality can often hit really hard.

I’ve seen so many colleagues lose their confidence in a system where exams are expensive, support is limited, and success often feels out of reach. Many end up in jobs they never imagined: driving taxis, working in call centres, doing aged care shifts, cleaning offices, or stacking supermarket shelves. These are good, honest jobs, and let me be clear: no work is unworthy. Every single job deserves respect.

But you didn’t spend a decade in medicine – grinding through sleepless nights, theory papers, viva voces, and clinical exams – just to stop here. Deep down, you know this. Because when you’re mopping a floor or delivering groceries, a little voice whispers:

“I miss being a doctor.”

And here’s the truth: that voice is right. You are still a doctor. The only thing standing between you and your medical career in Australia is the AMC exams.

Why Do So Many Doctors Get Stuck?

It’s not always the AMC exams itself that stops people. Many doctors get stuck in something much harder to escape — fear.

They fail once, maybe twice, and the shame feels unbearable. Confidence disappears. Family pressure grows. And so, they step away, telling themselves, “Maybe this is my life now.”

They keep working odd jobs, and over time, they stop believing they can return to medicine. Not because they can’t pass, but because they’ve convinced themselves they can’t.

But think about it: you already survived medical school. You passed countless theory papers, viva voces, and practical exams. You’ve done harder things before. That knowledge hasn’t disappeared – it’s just buried under fear and self-doubt. With the right support, you can wake it up again.

The Shame Feels Heavy – But You’re Not Alone

I’ve had doctors tell me:
“I felt like I’d lost my identity. My family stopped believing in me. I started doubting myself.”

It’s not just about failing an exam. It’s about the weight of years of sacrifice, parents who invested in your future, children waiting for stability. It feels like the whole world is watching.

Here’s the Truth

You can pass.

Yes, even if you’ve failed before. Yes, even if you’ve been away from medicine for years. Yes, even if you’re working nights and can barely find time to study.

I’ve seen doctors who failed seven times, who were told by others “maybe this isn’t for you,” finally cross the finish line. And when they did, they walked into the exam hall with one thing they didn’t have before: resilience.

One of my students told me after passing:
“The exam gave me back my confidence – but more importantly, it reminded me who I was all along.”

That’s the beauty of this journey. You don’t just pass an exam – you reclaim your identity.

No Job Is Unworthy – But Don’t Stop Here

Working while you study isn’t failure. It’s proof of your determination. It’s how you put food on the table while chasing your dream. Never be ashamed of that.

But don’t let it become the end of your story. Medicine is where you belong. Australia needs you. Your future patients need you.

Where Do You Go From Here?

If you’re reading this during a break at work, wondering if you’re too late, wondering if you’re good enough – let me be crystal clear: you are not stuck.

The path forward is simple:
– Study smart, not endlessly.
– Focus on the common and the practical.
– Surround yourself with people who believe in you.
– Get guidance from those who’ve walked the path.

And most importantly – don’t stop believing that you are still a doctor. Because you are.

Here’s my call to you: Stop waiting for the “perfect time” to start. There is no perfect time. The only right time is now.

Join us at Oyamed, where we’ve helped doctors just like you pass AMC Part 1and Part 2.

Take one small step today. Whether it’s signing up for a class, booking a mock exam, or even just sending me a message – do something your future self will thank you for.

Your dream of working as a doctor in Australia is not gone. It’s waiting for you to claim it back. And remember “You didn’t come this far, through years of sacrifice and study, just to end your story here. You are still a doctor — AMC exams is just a chapter, not the ending.”

05Jul

How to do Role-Play for AMC Clinical Exam OSCE Scenarios at Home — Even Without a Partner

Preparing for the AMC Clinical exam OSCE can feel lonely at times — especially if you don’t have a study partner or can’t always attend group sessions. But here’s some good news: you can practise effectively on your own. In fact, many of my students start this way before they ever role-play with a real person.

Here are a few realistic strategies you can try today — plus my simple “float and dive” method that helps you cover a scenario properly, even when you’re talking to an empty room.

  1. Start with the Basics — Out Loud

Reading notes won’t prepare you for the OSCE. You have to get comfortable speaking out loud. Pick any common scenario — for example, a young woman with abdominal pain. Stand in front of a mirror, or sit at your desk, and talk through:

Your introduction

Your open questions

Specific red flags and risk factors

Explanation and counselling

It feels awkward at first. That’s normal. You’re training your mouth and brain to work together under pressure.

 

  1. Use the “Float and Dive” Method

Most candidates get stuck because they drill down too soon or not at all. My method is simple:

Float: Start wide — gather big-picture information. What’s the main problem? How long? Any warning signs?

Dive: Once you hear a clue (like sudden severe pain, or a sexual history), go deeper into that line.

Then, float back up — check you didn’t miss the rest of the history. It’s like scanning the ocean: swim around, then dive when you see something interesting.

 

  1. Play Both Roles

If you’re alone, switch chairs (literally!). Sit as the patient and answer your own questions out loud. Many of my students find this makes them think like an examiner: Did I ask the right thing? Did that question make sense?

 

  1. Record and Reflect

Use your phone. Record a full 8-minute scenario, then play it back. Notice:

Are you speaking too fast or too slow?

Did you miss key questions?

How was your explanation at the end?

Most people hate listening to themselves — do it anyway. It’s one of the best self-correction tools you have.

 

  1. Bring in Friends or Family (Optional)

No willing partner? No problem. But if you have kids, a spouse, or a housemate, get them to read a patient brief to you. You’d be surprised how much this helps — and they don’t need medical knowledge.

 

Consistency Beats Perfection

At the end of the day, regular short practice beats one big session the night before your exam. Even 10–15 minutes a day is enough. The goal is to train your thinking pattern, your mouth, and your nerves — so when you face the real examiner, it feels like just another scenario.

Need a push?

At Oyamed, we run small group role-plays and realistic mocks every week. If you’re ready to pass, come join us — you’ll never have to prepare alone again.

“Remember: you don’t pass because you know everything. You pass because you practised enough to stay calm when it counts.”

You’ve got this.