<p>Bio, Chem and maths. Don’t know why, it just is. The vast majority of UK medical students did these A-levels. However, if you want to do Physics instead of or as well as maths, feel free to do so. There is no magic combination which will get you in (though lack of Chemistry would probably exclude you). </p>
<p>ITA with other posters who have suggested go4cornell concentrates on ONE complete set of acceptable qualifications. If you are intending to study for UK A-levels they are NOT one exam like APs or SATs. They are a course of study over 2 whole years. UK students study nothing else at school, day in, day out, for two whole years. Courses work and multiple exams over the 2 years are included in the final grades. There are qualifications called A-levels in other countries, especially in Asia, which may be different to this.</p>
<p>What you need are 3 As at A-level or acceptable equivalent, and lots of relevant work experience. Plus luck, and shed loads of cash as an overseas students. Eve with all of the above, the odds are stacked against you as an overseas medicine applicant in the UK, because there is a UK quota to fill vacancies in the UK national health service. So your odds of acceptance for medicine are very low no matter what you do, and you cannot change that.</p>
<p>Edited to add if the unis you are looking at consider more than 3 CAPE subjects needed to be equivalent to 3 UK A-levels, then that is what you have to do if you do CAPE. Do not start deciding the admission requirements yourself. That is asking for trouble.</p>