Medical School Application Support
Personalised guidance for every stage of your medical school application — from choosing the right universities to crafting a personal statement that stands out, to interview technique that gets offers.
Begin a free conversationWhat's included
- University shortlisting strategy based on your profile and UCAT score
- Personal statement development — structure, content and multiple drafts with tracked feedback
- Work experience reflection — how to discuss and contextualise your experiences
- Interview preparation: MMI, panel and traditional formats
- Common interview stations: ethics, NHS, clinical scenarios, motivation questions
- Mock interviews with detailed written feedback
- UCAS application review before submission
Who this is for
This service is designed for Year 12 and Year 13 students applying to UK medical schools, as well as gap-year applicants and graduate-entry candidates. It is suitable for first-time applicants and reapplicants. You do not need a complete personal statement to start — many students begin in Year 11 or early Year 12 and we build the application from scratch together.
The credential that matters
I went through the UK medical school application process and received an offer from UCL — one of the most competitive medical schools in the country. I know what admissions tutors are looking for because I have spoken to them, been taught by them, and been on the other side of the process. I can give you honest, inside feedback on your personal statement and interview answers — not generic advice, but specific guidance based on what actually works.
How it works
Application audit
We review your academic record, work experience and target universities to build a clear picture of your application strengths.
Personal statement
Multiple drafts with tracked written feedback — from initial structure to final polished version.
Interview preparation
Mock MMI and panel interviews with detailed feedback. We cover ethics, clinical scenarios, motivation and NHS questions.
Final review
A full review of your UCAS application before submission — checking consistency, accuracy and impact.
“Izem helped me transform a generic personal statement into something that genuinely reflected my experiences. Her feedback was specific and honest — she told me what wasn't working and exactly how to fix it. I got offers from three of my five choices.”
Frequently asked
When should I start working on my medical school personal statement?
Ideally in Year 12 — even if the UCAS deadline is not until January of Year 13. Starting early gives you time to reflect properly on your work experience, write multiple drafts and refine your narrative without pressure. Many students I work with begin in spring or summer of Year 12.
What makes a strong medicine personal statement?
A strong medicine personal statement is specific, reflective and honest. It does not list experiences — it analyses them. Admissions tutors can tell the difference between a student who has genuinely reflected on what they saw in a hospital ward and one who has written what they think they are supposed to say. I help you find and articulate the genuine insight from your experiences.
Do you help with graduate-entry medicine applications?
Yes — I work with graduate-entry applicants as well as school leavers. Graduate entry has different requirements and different personal statement expectations, and I can help you navigate those differences and make the most of your existing degree and experience.
How many mock interviews do you typically do with students?
Most students benefit from 3–5 mock interviews, starting with practice on individual stations and building up to full timed mocks. We always do at least one full MMI circuit before their actual interview dates.
Begin a free conversation
No commitment. Just a conversation about your goals and how I can help. I respond within 24 hours.