UK medical finals now substantially overlap with the UKMLA AKT and PSA — the national licensing and prescribing assessments. Final-year revision should cover the MLA Content Map (~430 conditions across 18 body systems), prescribing safety, and applied clinical reasoning in SBA format.
What Makes a Good Revision App for This Exam?
Curriculum-aligned questions. Questions should be mapped to the exam's published curriculum, blueprint, or content outline. Topic coverage should reflect the weighting of the actual assessment — not distributed randomly across medicine.
Exam-format matching. Practice questions should match the format candidates will face on exam day. Practising in the wrong format trains the wrong cognitive skill and does not prepare for the specific decision-making the exam demands.
Mock exam mode. Full-length, timed simulations that reproduce exam-day conditions. Untimed practice builds knowledge; timed mocks build exam performance. Both are needed.
Spaced repetition. Missed concepts should resurface at optimal intervals to prevent knowledge decay across broad curricula. Without spaced repetition, early revision fades while later topics are covered.
Adaptive learning. The system should identify weak areas and adjust question selection accordingly — targeting the underlying conceptual gap rather than serving more generic topic-matched questions.
Clear explanations. Not just the correct answer, but why each distractor is wrong — building the discriminatory reasoning that SBA exams test.
Study Strategy
Start with a diagnostic baseline across all exam topic areas to identify weak spots. Focus early revision on the weakest areas while maintaining breadth. Use spaced repetition throughout to prevent knowledge decay. Introduce timed mock exams from 6-8 weeks before the exam. Increase mock frequency in the final month and focus on persistent weak areas.
For candidates preparing for multiple related exams, clinical overlap means revision for one exam reinforces knowledge relevant to others. A platform that covers multiple exams within a single subscription captures this cross-exam benefit.
iatroX covers UKMLA, PSA, and the broad clinical curriculum needed for finals — with mock exam mode, spaced repetition, and adaptive learning. Free for UK medical students. Ask iatroX provides source-grounded clinical clarification during revision.
How UK Finals Have Changed
UK medical finals now substantially overlap with the UKMLA AKT (Applied Knowledge Test) and the PSA (Prescribing Safety Assessment). From the academic year 2024-25, all UK medical graduates must pass the MLA as part of their degree before joining the medical register. This means final-year revision should be structured around the MLA Content Map rather than historical medical school exam patterns.
The MLA Content Map covers approximately 430 conditions and presentations across 24 areas of clinical practice. The AKT tests applied clinical reasoning through SBA questions — clinical vignettes requiring interpretation and management decisions, not isolated factual recall. Medical schools may add additional assessments beyond the MLA, but the core licensing standard is now national.
What This Means for Revision
Final-year medical students need to cover the full breadth of the MLA Content Map — medicine, surgery, paediatrics, obstetrics and gynaecology, psychiatry, emergency medicine, general practice, and cross-cutting themes (ethics, law, patient safety, communication). The exam tests at FY2 level, meaning questions expect the candidate to demonstrate safe clinical reasoning rather than specialist knowledge.
Breadth over depth. With 430 conditions to cover, comprehensive breadth is more important than deep specialty knowledge. Major topic gaps are the highest-risk failure mode — a candidate who is strong in medicine but has neglected paediatrics, psychiatry, or O&G is vulnerable.
Applied reasoning. UKMLA questions present clinical scenarios requiring interpretation and decision-making. Pure factual recall questions are rare. Revision should focus on applied clinical vignettes rather than flashcard-style memorisation.
Prescribing safety. The PSA tests practical prescribing competence — a skill that must be practised deliberately, not assumed from theoretical pharmacology knowledge.
Study Strategy
Start with a diagnostic baseline across all MLA Content Map areas. Identify weak body systems and allocate more time to them. Use a Q-bank mapped to the MLA Content Map. Integrate PSA prescribing practice into your revision schedule. Sit timed mocks from 6-8 weeks before finals. Use spaced repetition to prevent early revision from decaying.
UK Medical Finals and the UKMLA
UK medical finals now encompass the UKMLA alongside university-specific assessments. Candidates prepare for both — the standardised national assessment and their institution's clinical exams. The UKMLA AKT tests clinical reasoning across ~430 conditions in the MLA Content Map, while OSCEs and other clinical assessments vary by medical school.
Finals Preparation Strategy
The dual preparation challenge requires broad coverage (for UKMLA) alongside institution-specific exam technique (for local assessments). Candidates should start with systematic UKMLA coverage using the MLA Content Map as a checklist, then layer institution-specific clinical skills preparation in the final weeks. Mock exams for both UKMLA-style SBAs and local OSCE formats are essential.
Building an Effective UK finals Study Strategy
Effective UK finals preparation follows a structured progression from broad coverage to targeted consolidation.
Phase 1 — Foundation building (weeks 1-4 of a 8-12-week plan). Work through questions by topic area in untimed mode. The goal is broad coverage, not speed. Read every explanation thoroughly, including why incorrect options are wrong. Flag topics where understanding feels superficial rather than confident. Use iatroX's topic filters to ensure systematic coverage rather than gravitating toward comfortable subjects.
Phase 2 — Gap identification and targeted revision (weeks 5-8). Review analytics to identify persistent weak areas. Shift from broad coverage to targeted work on the topics where performance lags. iatroX's adaptive algorithm prioritises questions from areas where the candidate has demonstrated uncertainty, ensuring revision time is spent where it will have the greatest impact. Spaced repetition scheduling resurfaces previously answered questions at intervals optimised for long-term retention.
Phase 3 — Exam simulation and consolidation (final 4+ weeks). Transition to timed practice and full mock exams. Mock exams should replicate exam conditions as closely as possible — full-length, timed, with no interruptions. Review mock performance not just for content gaps but for pacing, question interpretation, and decision-making under time pressure. iatroX's mock exam mode generates exam-length papers that mirror the real assessment format.
Active recall vs passive reading. The evidence for active recall in medical education is robust. Answering questions, retrieving information from memory, and testing oneself are consistently more effective than re-reading notes or textbooks. A well-structured Q-bank provides the scaffolding for active recall — each question is a retrieval opportunity, each explanation is a learning event. Combined with spaced repetition, this produces durable knowledge that persists to exam day and beyond.
Analytics-driven adjustment. Static study plans assume every candidate starts from the same baseline and progresses at the same rate. Analytics-driven preparation — where study allocation adjusts based on actual performance data — is significantly more efficient. iatroX's dashboard shows per-topic accuracy, trend data, and comparison between areas, enabling candidates to make evidence-based decisions about where to spend their limited revision time.
Common UK finals Preparation Mistakes
Over-relying on a single resource. No single Q-bank, textbook, or course covers everything. Candidates who use only one resource risk developing blind spots in areas that resource under-represents. The strongest preparation combines a primary Q-bank with supplementary reading and, where possible, a second source of practice questions for cross-referencing.
Studying topics rather than weaknesses. Candidates naturally gravitate toward topics they find interesting or already know well. Effective preparation requires the opposite — disproportionate time on the areas where performance is weakest. Analytics tools that track per-topic accuracy and flag persistent weak areas are essential for overcoming this tendency. Without data, candidates spend revision time reinforcing strengths rather than closing gaps.
Neglecting exam technique. Knowledge alone is insufficient. Candidates who never practise under timed conditions often find that exam-day time pressure degrades their performance by 10-15% compared to untimed practice. Regular timed practice and full-length mock exams build the pacing, endurance, and decision-making stamina that the real exam demands. This is a trainable skill, not an innate one.
Starting too late. Cramming produces short-term recall but poor long-term retention. Spaced repetition — revisiting material at increasing intervals — builds durable knowledge. Starting preparation early enough to allow multiple revision cycles produces significantly better outcomes than last-minute intensive cramming. A 16-week plan with moderate daily study consistently outperforms a 4-week plan with intensive daily study.
Ignoring incorrect answers. Many candidates check whether they got a question right and move on. The learning value is primarily in the explanation — understanding why the correct answer is correct, why each distractor is wrong, and what clinical reasoning links them. Candidates who spend time on explanations learn more per question than those who rush through high volumes without reflection.
How iatroX Supports UK finals Preparation
iatroX provides several features specifically relevant to UK finals candidates:
Adaptive question selection. Rather than presenting questions randomly, iatroX's adaptive algorithm analyses performance patterns and selects questions that target demonstrated weak areas. Revision time is spent where it will have the greatest impact on exam readiness, not reinforcing already-strong topics.
Spaced repetition scheduling. Previously answered questions are re-presented at intervals calibrated to the spacing effect. Incorrectly answered questions return sooner; correctly answered questions are spaced further apart. This produces durable long-term retention rather than fragile short-term recall.
Mock exam mode. Full-length, timed mock exams replicate the structure and time constraints of the real assessment. Mock analytics show per-topic performance, pacing data, and score trends across multiple attempts — enabling candidates to track improvement and identify persistent gaps.
Study planning. Personalised study plans based on exam date, available study time, and current performance level. Plans adapt as the candidate progresses, shifting emphasis toward areas where improvement is most needed.
Multi-platform access. Available on web, iOS, and Android — enabling revision during commutes, placements, and breaks without losing progress or analytics data. Progress syncs across all devices automatically.
Clinical AI integration. Ask iatroX provides guideline-grounded clinical queries powered by RAG over NICE, CKS, BNF, EMC, and NHS content — enabling candidates to verify management approaches against current UK guidelines during revision. Over 80 clinical calculators cover scoring systems and decision tools used in daily practice. CPD tracking with FourteenFish integration means the platform serves beyond exam preparation into ongoing professional development.
MHRA-registered platform. iatroX holds UKCA marking and MHRA Class I registration — a regulatory standard that most revision platforms do not hold, reflecting the platform's clinical decision support capabilities alongside exam preparation.
2026 Revision Strategy and Resource Checklist
Candidates should treat every revision resource as an exam-performance tool, not simply as a content library. The strongest platforms make the candidate practise the same cognitive task the real exam demands: reading a vignette, identifying the discriminating clinical clue, choosing the safest answer, and learning from the distractors. For this reason, the most useful comparison is not "which app has the most questions?" but "which app produces the most improvement per hour of revision?"
The key capability is safe FY1-level applied clinical reasoning across the MLA content map. That means a revision app should provide more than topic filters. It should let candidates build a representative exam mix, practise in timed mode, revisit missed concepts, and see whether performance is improving across the domains that actually matter. The GMC MLA content map is the key source because it defines the presentations, conditions and professional capabilities that sit behind the AKT and CPSA.
A practical way to evaluate a question bank is to inspect ten explanations before committing. Strong explanations usually do four things: they identify the diagnosis or principle being tested, explain why the correct answer is safer or more appropriate than the alternatives, show why the distractors are tempting but wrong, and link the point back to a repeatable exam rule. Weak explanations simply restate the answer. In high-stakes medical exams, that difference matters because candidates lose marks at the margin: two options may look plausible, but only one is most appropriate in that clinical context.
A Practical 16-20 weeks Study Workflow
A sensible Apps for UK Medical Finals plan should begin with a mixed diagnostic block rather than a favourite topic. The purpose is not to score highly on day one; it is to expose the initial pattern of weakness. Once the baseline is clear, the first phase should focus on broad curriculum coverage. Candidates should work in untimed mode, read explanations carefully, and convert recurrent errors into a small number of revision rules: "what did I miss?", "what clue should have changed my answer?", and "what will I do next time I see this pattern?"
The second phase should become more selective. This is where iatroX's adaptive learning and semantic similarity approach become useful. Instead of merely showing that a candidate is weak in a large topic such as cardiology, respiratory medicine, paediatrics or prescribing, the platform can identify clusters of related errors across apparently separate labels. A candidate who repeatedly misses questions involving breathlessness, anticoagulation, heart failure and renal dosing may not have four unrelated weaknesses; they may have one underlying weakness in integrated cardiorenal decision-making. Targeting that root gap is more efficient than simply serving another random block from the same broad category.
The final phase should be dominated by timed work and mocks. Untimed practice builds knowledge, but timed practice builds the exam behaviour: reading stems efficiently, resisting overthinking, managing uncertainty and recovering after difficult questions. Candidates should deliberately practise curriculum coverage, question interpretation, time management, weak-area correction and durable recall. These are the areas where a good app should force active recall rather than passive recognition.
What iatroX Adds Beyond a Traditional Q-Bank
iatroX is positioned as a revision layer and a clinical reasoning layer. The question bank provides curriculum-mapped practice, mocks, spaced repetition and adaptive recommendations. Ask iatroX, calculators and CPD logging then connect that revision to clinical practice. This matters because most candidates are not revising in isolation; they are revising while working, on placement, preparing for another exam, or moving between health systems.
The practical advantage is continuity. A candidate can use iatroX for focused practice, switch to a mock, clarify a guideline-linked point, return to missed concepts through spaced repetition, and then use the same broader platform in clinical work. For candidates preparing for more than one assessment, multi-exam access also reduces duplication. Knowledge built for one exam often supports another, but only if the platform is organised around reusable clinical concepts rather than isolated exam silos.
Candidate Checklist Before Subscribing
Before choosing a revision resource, candidates should check:
Does it match the exam format? SBA, MCQ, EMQ, calculation, written response and case-simulation exams require different practice behaviours.
Does it map to the curriculum or blueprint? Large question volume is less useful if the distribution does not reflect the real assessment.
Does it support timed mocks? Exam performance depends on pacing and endurance, not knowledge alone.
Does it resurface missed concepts? Without spaced repetition, early revision decays while later topics are being covered.
Does it show actionable analytics? Topic percentages are useful, but the best systems identify the clinical reasoning pattern behind repeated errors.
Does it fit real working life? Mobile access, short practice blocks and continuity across devices are not luxuries for clinicians; they are what make consistent revision possible.
