Visual Learning Center

Learn by Doing, Not Watching

Step-by-step guides to mastering the MediKarya platform, improving your diagnostic workflow, and building clinical confidence before your first real patient.

Why simulation-based learning works

Immediate feedback loops

In real clinical placements, you often don't see the outcome of a decision for days. Simulation compresses that feedback to seconds — you see exactly where your reasoning diverged, while it's still fresh.

Practice without consequence

Aviation and surgery both rely on simulation because errors in those fields are unacceptable. Medical students deserve the same rehearsal space — a place to make mistakes, learn, and repeat before the stakes are real.

Targeted skill building

Clinical attachments are unpredictable — you see what comes in. Simulation lets you specifically target your weak areas: ECG interpretation, differential generation, investigation ordering, and more.

1

Getting Started

Essential tutorials for new users
5 min
Beginner

Getting Started with MediKarya

A complete walkthrough of the platform — logging in, navigating the dashboard, and starting your first patient simulation.

8 min
Beginner

How to Navigate a Patient Case

Learn how to take a history, order investigations, and arrive at a diagnosis inside a MediKarya simulation environment.

10 min
Beginner

Ordering Investigations Effectively

Not every test is the right test. This tutorial covers how to think about investigations — what to order, when, and why.

2

Advanced Skills

For students who've completed a few cases
15 min
Intermediate

Advanced Diagnostic Reasoning

Go beyond textbook differentials. Learn to build problem representations and narrow diagnoses under time pressure.

12 min
Intermediate

Reading ECGs in Simulation

A structured approach to ECG interpretation — rhythm, axis, intervals, morphology — applied to real simulation cases.

20 min
Advanced

Approaching Rare Clinical Presentations

When the obvious diagnosis doesn't fit — how to widen your differential and think through uncommon conditions methodically.

Ready to put it into practice?

Browse Patient Simulations →