2025-04-23 | Category: Mrcog 2

🎤 Candidate
Testimonials: Real Voices, Real Journeys
👩⚕️ Dr. Meena Rajan –
Malaysia
"I printed out every GTG and took it with me during
my lunch breaks."
After working full-time in a district hospital, Meena prepared for Part 2 by
reading one guideline per day and joining a weekly peer quiz
group on Telegram.
Her tip: “I colour-coded topics by confidence level. Red ones got double
revision!”
👨⚕️ Dr. Ahmed Kareem –
UAE
"Failing Part 3 was the best lesson I needed."
Ahmed didn’t pass his first Part 3 attempt. After a 6-month gap, he enrolled in
a structured online OSCE course and practiced with a mentor weekly.
His advice: “Record yourself, even if it’s awkward. You’ll catch habits
you never knew you had.”
👩⚕️ Dr. Ayesha Banerjee
– India
"I balanced night shifts and mock circuits by using
early mornings for study."
Working in a government hospital with erratic hours, Ayesha set aside 90
minutes every morning for guideline revision and OSCE prep.
Her motto: “Consistency beats intensity. Small steps daily got me
there.”
👩⚕️ Dr. Sara Khalid –
Egypt
"My study buddy became my emotional anchor."
Sara joined a WhatsApp study group where she met another candidate in the same
timezone. They shared weekly targets and held each other accountable.
Her takeaway: “This journey is hard—but easier when shared.”
👨⚕️ Dr. Rohan Singh – UK
"The mock exams online felt tougher than the real
thing—and that helped!"
Rohan used paid question banks and attended three online mock OSCEs before Part
3. He found the pressure helpful for developing fluency.
His secret: “Read aloud every day. It trains your timing and clarity.”
👩⚕️ Dr. Thandiwe Moyo –
South Africa
"I kept a small MRCOG diary—just 5 bullet points a
day."
Instead of long notes, Thandiwe kept a diary where she wrote only five key
ideas per day. These included GTG summaries, mistakes, or OSCE phrases.
Reflection: “That notebook became my most powerful revision tool.”
👩⚕️ Dr. Rina Das –
Bangladesh
"I simulated patient stations with my husband—he got
really good at acting confused!"
Rina practiced OSCE communication scenarios with her partner every weekend.
Best moment: “He once pretended to be a panicked father in a shoulder
dystocia case. We couldn’t stop laughing—but I nailed that station in the real
exam.”
📹 Encourage
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💬 Have an MRCOG
story to tell?
Share your study tips, struggles, or breakthrough moments.
👉
Submit your testimonial or short video to stories@passexaminations.com