15/06/2026
Take action save your academic year 🚨 contact me for a for 60 min clear map to navigate your finals 🩺
Prof. Internal Med | Infectious Diseases
✍️ 90+ papers | Editor: Infection & Autoimmunity '24
🎓 Mentor | Advisor @acemedtr
📩 DM for med guidance
15/06/2026
Take action save your academic year 🚨 contact me for a for 60 min clear map to navigate your finals 🩺
If you know the material but still struggle during finals, the problem may not be knowledge it may be strategy.
Students with the same level of preparation often get very different results because of how they manage their time, stress, and study plan.
A strong final exam season isn’t just about studying harder. It’s about studying smarter.
If you’re feeling overwhelmed and need a clear plan for your finals, send me a message and let’s build one together.
To every medical student entering the final stretch:
You have come too far to doubt yourself now.
The long nights, the sacrifices, the stress, the moments when you felt exhausted and overwhelmed… they were not for nothing. Every page you studied, every question you solved, and every challenge you overcame has prepared you for this moment.
Don’t focus on how much is left. Focus on how much you’ve already accomplished.
Walk into your exams with confidence, trust your preparation, and give it your best effort. That’s all anyone can ask of you.
Wishing every one of you clarity, confidence, and success in your exams. May all your hard work pay off.
Good luck. You’ve got this. 🤍
Most students believe that doing more MCQs automatically leads to better scores.
It doesn’t.
MCQs are powerful because they simulate the real exam, but they become almost useless when you simply answer, check the result, and move on.
The real learning happens after the question.
When you get a question wrong, ask yourself:
✅ Why did I choose that answer?
✅ Why is the correct answer correct?
✅ Why are the other options wrong?
✅ What concept did I misunderstand?
Every mistake is feedback.
A student who carefully analyzes 20 questions will often learn more than a student who rushes through 200.
Don’t just solve questions.
Dissect them.
That’s where the score improvement happens.
🩺📚
Taking notes doesn’t equal studying.
One of the biggest mistakes in medical school is spending hours making perfect notes, color coding every page, and organizing everything… while barely learning the material.
Notes are meant to support your learning, not replace it.
If you’re spending more time decorating information than testing yourself on it, you’re probably being productive without actually making progress.
Learn first. Understand first. Recall first.
Then use notes as a tool, not the goal.
24/05/2026
Some of Prague 🇨🇿
23/05/2026
Those are “ordinary” medical students, with only one difference…They had a big dream, never spoke about it loud. I saw it in their eyes…there everything began 💡
Brain storming of research idea 🧠, reading, then reading, then again reading 📚, then analyzing 🔬, then summarizing 📝
Then…The congress appeared 🏛️, we registered, then prepared, prepared, again prepared, extensively prepared…nonstop prepared 🏃🏻♂️💪
Finally, they presented in front of leading professors and experts 👨🏫👩🏫, and nobody believed those are medical students 🥼.
One very famous professor said after he asked me and I told him: No way they are students! I don’t want to believe this! 🥰
No words can explain how proud I am, and how much joy you brought to my heart ❤️
The 15th Autoimmunity Congress in Prague 🏛️🇨🇿 was definitely an extraordinary experience because of us ❤️
Let it be the start, from there, the sky is the limit 🦅
Love you all ❤️
Naim
Here we go…🦅
It wasn’t just an ordinary event or journey: it was teamwork 👏
A group that moved from hall to hall together, sat beside each other, got food for one another, made sure everyone was there, attended each other’s presentations, and took pictures for everyone…❤️🏛️
Look at us ❤️
15/05/2026
A moment that could go down in medical history.
In this clinical trial, every patient treated with Dostarlimab achieved complete remission with no detectable evidence of cancer on scans or endoscopy.
Research like this reminds us how powerful modern medicine can become.
New research from Mayo Clinic is changing the future of pancreatic cancer detection.
AI is now being trained to recognize tiny early warning signs that the human eye can easily miss on scans, potentially helping doctors detect pancreatic cancer months or even years earlier.
Earlier detection could mean earlier treatment. And in pancreatic cancer, timing changes everything.
The future of medicine isn’t just treating disease anymore… it’s predicting it before symptoms even begin. 🧠⚕️