// the ai study assistant for medical students
Built for the wards, not the desk.
Doctor AI is the AI study assistant for medical students that turns a chat-shaped answer into a drug dosage table, a graded patient encounter, or a board-style vignette, all on the same account and credits as the rest of StudyClock.
Educational use only. Doctor AI is not for diagnosing, treating, or advising on real patient care.
Ward Mode
You're the doctor — interview an AI patient, get debriefed.
Drug Reference
Mechanism, dosage, contraindications & interactions.
USMLE / PLAB Practice
Board-style vignettes with full explanations.
Daily Rounds
Today's case, question & pearl — keep your streak alive.
4 of 16 tools · same account, same credits
study guide
An AI study assistant for medical students, built around the wards and the boards
Doctor AI is a set of structured study tools for MBBS, USMLE, PLAB and NEET PG students, covering drug reference, AI patient encounters, anatomy Q&A, board-style practice questions, lab interpretation and a daily study habit loop, all inside one account. If you have ever asked a chatbot for a drug's dosage and got back three paragraphs you had to re-read to find the actual number, that is the exact gap this app is built to close.
Anyone studying medicine knows the volume problem. There is more content in one organ-system block than a normal degree covers in a full semester, and you are expected to hold it in working memory well enough to reason through a clinical vignette under exam pressure. Textbooks are authoritative but slow. Video lectures are clear but passive. And a generic AI chatbot is fast but shapeless, you ask a question, you get a wall of prose, and you still have to do the work of pulling out what is actually testable.
Doctor AI is not a chatbot with a stethoscope icon glued on. It is a structured suite of purpose-built tools, each one shaped like the actual task a medical student or junior doctor needs done. A drug lookup returns a dosage table, not a paragraph. A lab interpretation flags every abnormal value inline instead of describing the numbers in prose. An AI patient encounter grades your history-taking against a clinical rubric instead of simply announcing the diagnosis. Structured output versus free text is basically the whole design philosophy here.
In one line, Doctor AI is an AI study assistant for medical students, combining a drug reference, AI patient encounters, anatomy Q&A, board-exam practice questions and clinically tuned timers under one account built for MBBS, USMLE, PLAB and NEET PG.
who this is actually built for
Medical training is not one audience. It is several, and each group opens this app for a different reason.
- Pre-clinical students (year 1 to 2, anatomy, physiology, biochemistry) lean on Anatomy Q&A and the mnemonics generator to get through sheer content volume during long study blocks. This is the year most students first hit information overload, and it is where a fast recall tool matters most.
- Clinical-year students on the wards use a quick drug reference and interaction check between rounds, in the two-minute gap a normal study session does not have room for. Picture standing outside a patient's bed, trying to recall a beta-blocker's contraindication before the attending asks you directly.
- Board-exam candidates preparing for USMLE, PLAB or NEET PG run practice question sets and use Daily Rounds to turn study hours into a habit that compounds, instead of a last-week cramming spiral.
- Interns and residents use Ward Mode to rehearse history-taking under a graded rubric, and the Journal Digest to stay current without giving up an evening to it.
One account, one navigation bar, no mode toggle asking you to declare which kind of user you are. The product has everything, and you use whatever your rotation needs this week.
the toolkit, module by module
Every module sits on its own page instead of hiding behind tabs, so each tool is deep-linkable. You can drop a direct link to one drug lookup or one generated question set straight into a hostel study-group chat. The current lineup, honestly listed rather than padded:
- Drug Reference & Interaction Checker: mechanism, dosage, contraindications, plus a separate multi-drug interaction cross-check.
- Clinical Case Discussion: a Socratic-method AI tutor walking you through a differential.
- Ward Mode: you play doctor, the AI plays patient, a rubric grades the debrief afterward.
- Anatomy Q&A: structures, relations, and one applied clinical correlation per answer.
- USMLE/PLAB practice questions: full vignettes with distractor-by-distractor explanations.
- Lab Values & ECG interpreter: every value flagged against a normal range, with the overall pattern called out.
- Mnemonics generator: find the classic mnemonic, or build a custom one for your own list.
- Book & resource guide: a focused stack per exam, not a forty-item wishlist.
- Journal Digest: a five-minute weekly read on what actually changed in your specialty.
- Case Write-up Assistant: rough ward notes turned into a practice SOAP note.
- AI Medical Report Analyzer: upload a real lab or scan report, get structured findings and trend charts across visits.
- Daily Rounds, Review, and My Library: the habit and retention layer that ties everything else together.
a night-before-viva example
Take a real scenario. It's 11pm, and you have a surprise viva at 8am on renal physiology. Your notes from three months ago are half-legible, your textbook chapter is forty pages, and you genuinely do not have time to read all of it again. This is exactly the situation Doctor AI is built for. You open Anatomy Q&A and ask about the juxtaglomerular apparatus, get a structured answer with the clinical correlation your examiner is likely to ask about, then run three quick questions through practice questions to check whether it actually stuck. Fifteen minutes, not four hours. That is the entire pitch of this product in one scenario.
how it compares to Anki and a qbank, honestly
Anki is unbeaten for pure spaced repetition once you already have cards built, and a lot of toppers swear by it. The catch is that building good cards takes real time, often more time than the studying itself in the early weeks. Doctor AI's Review module skips that step: tap "Study This" under any result and three to five cards get generated automatically on a 1/3/7/21-day interval ladder. It is a simpler algorithm than Anki's, and if you already have a mature Anki deck, there is no reason to abandon it. But if you have never gotten around to building one, this removes the single biggest reason most students quit spaced repetition before it starts working.
UWorld and AMBOSS remain the gold standard for a full, curated qbank with predictive scoring against the real exam. Doctor AI does not compete with that, and honestly should not try to. What it does well is everything around the qbank: the two-minute lookup, the mnemonic you need right now, the interaction check before a viva. Most students who use this well run both, a qbank for structured practice, Doctor AI for everything in between.
why an AI-native tool beats a generic qbank
Question banks like UWorld and AMBOSS are excellent at what they are built for, a large, curated, human-written item bank with predictive scoring. Doctor AI is not trying to replace that. It solves a different problem, the moment-to-moment study friction a qbank never touches. Nobody opens a three-thousand-item qbank to check one drug interaction before a viva, or to get a mnemonic for a nerve's branches five minutes before a practical exam. That is exactly the moment Doctor AI is built for: fast, structured, available at 2am post-call, and cheap enough per use that you are not staring down a steep annual qbank fee just to check one fact.
Honestly, this is the one distinction I would tell a first-year to actually internalize. A qbank teaches you to answer exam questions. Doctor AI is there for the fifty small lookups that happen around that studying, the ones too small to justify opening a textbook for.
safety first, always an educational tool
Every result Doctor AI generates carries a visible "AI-generated, verify independently" tag, and every module runs behind a guardrail that detects real-patient-care questions and redirects to "consult your senior physician" instead of attempting an answer. This is not a diagnostic tool. It is never meant to replace a licensed physician's judgment, your hospital's official guidelines, or your senior doctor's advice on an actual patient. It exists to make studying faster and more structured, nothing generated here should ever be the basis for a real clinical decision.
NEET PG, FMGE, USMLE and PLAB, all on one engine
The tool labels say USMLE and PLAB, but the underlying clinical knowledge behind practice questions, drug reference, and clinical case discussion is exam-agnostic. Select "USMLE Step 1" as the target and you get basic-science-heavy vignettes that map closely to NEET PG's own question style, since both exams are drawing from the same core clinical science. Select "Step 2 CK" and you get clinical-medicine questions, the kind that show up in INICET and FMGE too. So that's why so many NEET PG aspirants end up using the USMLE-labelled question generator without ever planning to sit the actual USMLE, the underlying pharmacology, pathology and clinical reasoning simply does not change based on which exam board is asking.
getting started in under a minute
Every account starts with free daily credits across the full toolkit, no credit card required. Head to the Doctor AI hub to see the whole toolkit, or go straight to the timer suite if you just need a focused study block right now. Not sure where to start? Daily Rounds is the best on-ramp: one case, one question, one pearl, about two minutes, and it is the feature the rest of the habit loop is built around.
what "free daily credits" actually means
Every AI action, a drug lookup, a generated question set, a Ward Mode message, costs a small number of credits pulled from a daily free allowance that refreshes automatically. There is no trial period that quietly ends after a week. You will see the result the same day you sign up, no waiting on an approval email, no card details asked for at the door. A Pro plan exists for students who go through the free allowance fast, mostly Ward Mode and the Report Analyzer, which cost more credits per use since they do more work, but nothing about the free tier is a crippled demo version. Most students studying pharmacology and running a couple of daily lookups never need to upgrade at all.
built on the same account as StudyClock
Doctor AI is not a separate product bolted onto an unrelated login. It shares an account and credit system with the rest of StudyClock, the study platform it is built on top of. So if you have used StudyClock's timers or general AI study tools before, your existing account already works here, nothing new to sign up for. Your study streak, your credit balance and your saved history all live in one place instead of being split across separate apps each demanding their own subscription.
medical vocabulary, not productivity-app vocabulary
The naming across this app is deliberate. Rounds instead of generic pomodoro sessions, Ward Mode instead of a generic simulator, a Daily Rounds streak instead of a generic daily quiz. Medical training already has its own rhythm, rounds, rotations, boards, call, the wards, and a tool that speaks that language rather than borrowing generic productivity-app terms tends to feel like it actually understands the job. Basically, this was not built as a study app with a stethoscope icon added afterward. It was built around how medical training actually runs, from the ground up.