Why NEET PG Students Struggle with Retention (And How Medulla Flashcards Fix the Problem)

If you’re a NEET PG aspirant, you already know the drill:

  • 10–12 hours of study every day

  • Multiple subjects, thousands of facts

  • And the constant pressure of “Will I remember this in the exam hall?”

It’s not that students don’t study hard. The real problem is that most of what you revise slips away within days. You read a topic, underline, highlight, maybe even revise once—but by the time you move on to the next subject, the old one has already started fading.

This cycle leaves students anxious and frustrated.


The Enticing Problem: The Forgetting Curve

Psychologists call it the forgetting curve—your brain tends to forget up to 70% of new information within a week if it’s not revised smartly.

That’s why so many NEET PG aspirants feel like they are “always studying but never retaining.”
And the bigger problem? Traditional revision methods like:

  • Reading textbooks again

  • Highlighting notes

  • Or passively watching videos

...don’t fight the forgetting curve effectively.


The Smart Fix: Medulla Flashcards

Medulla Flashcards were built with this very pain point in mind. Instead of drowning in books and PDFs, you get bite-sized, active recall cards that force your brain to retrieve information.

This retrieval practice is scientifically proven to:
✅ Strengthen memory
✅ Improve long-term retention
✅ Reduce exam anxiety (because you know you’ve revised)


Why Students Are Choosing Flashcards Over Notes

Here’s why Medulla feels like a personal revision hack:

  • Spaced Repetition: Topics reappear right before you’re about to forget them.

  • Active Recall: You’re not just reading—you’re testing yourself.

  • On-the-go learning: Instead of wasting time scrolling, you can revise MCQs while traveling or waiting.

  • Confidence boost: Each session feels like progress, not guesswork.


A Real Student Story

Ritika, a final-year MBBS student, said:

“I used to revise Medicine 3–4 times, but still forgot the smaller details. With Medulla, I’ve done short, consistent flashcard sessions, and now I remember better in mock tests. It feels like my brain is finally on my side.”

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