Free OSCE stations for Australian medical finals
Free OSCE practice for Australian and New Zealand medical students. Run a full OSCE station with an AI patient and an AI examiner, download a station-by-station checklist, and drill notes and questions, all marked to Australian clinical-finals standard and all with no signup. The full 199-station bank lives in the PRIMEX Medical Students app.
Try an OSCE station now
A full station with an AI patient for history-taking and an AI examiner for findings and management, plus a per-domain mark sheet. No account needed.
AU final-year OSCE checklist
A station-by-station checklist covering all five station types and the AU-specific items examiners mark for. Download, read offline, share.
Clinical-finals study notes
Presentation-to-management notes across the major clinical topics, calibrated to final-year level with Australian guidelines.
SAQ and MCQ grader
Practise finals-style SAQs and MCQs, marked by the same AI grader the app uses, with a marking checklist and model answer.
Why Australian-native OSCE practice matters
Australian university OSCEs mark management against Australian references: eTG-aligned prescribing, PBS drug names, Medicare and NDIS pathways, the state Mental Health Acts, the 715 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health assessment, and culturally safe communication. UK and US platforms are built around their own guidelines and tell overseas students to check local ones, which leaves you translating in the exam. The PRIMEX OSCE stations, checklist and notes are written for the Australian finals context from the start, so what you practise is what you are marked on.
The five OSCE station types
Australian clinical finals vary by university but test the same five core station types. The free station and checklist cover all of them.
- History-taking. Structured history with the named frameworks (SOCRATES, ICE, HEADSS) and the AU-specific must-asks such as pack-years, standard drinks, vaccination status and cultural identity.
- Clinical examination. Named examination routines for the cardiovascular, respiratory, abdominal, neurological and musculoskeletal systems, plus the mental state examination.
- Explanation and counselling. Chunk-and-check structure, plain-language risk communication, SPIKES for breaking bad news, and the interpreter offer.
- Procedural description. The consent, indications, equipment and asepsis sequence for common procedures.
- Ethics and communication. Capacity, Gillick competence, mandatory reporting thresholds, open disclosure and the state Mental Health Acts.
How the free OSCE station works
The station opens with a candidate card (setting, scenario, observations and task), then runs an AI patient you take a history from and an AI examiner that asks for your findings and management. At the end you get a per-domain mark sheet and feedback calibrated to final-year student level, not intern or fellowship. Safe-but-imperfect answers score up; dangerous calls still fail. It is the same engine as the full app, so the free station is a genuine sample rather than a cut-down demo.
Common questions
Are the OSCE stations really free?
Yes. You can run a full station with marking-grid feedback and no signup. The complete 199-station bank is in the PRIMEX Medical Students app, which has a 7-day free trial.
Do I need an account or an email?
No. The free OSCE station, the checklist PDF, the study notes and the SAQ and MCQ grader are all usable without a signup.
What level are the stations marked at?
Final-year Australian medical-student standard, the level your university clinical finals assess, not intern or specialist-fellowship level.
Want the full OSCE bank and daily practice?
The PRIMEX Medical Students section has 199 OSCE stations with an AI patient and AI examiner, image-stem practice, 12,522 spaced-repetition flashcards and 608 study notes calibrated to Australian final-year level. It stays with you from finals through fellowship on one subscription. 7-day free trial, cancel anytime in the app.
See the med student app