Also AMG, also took research year, also no clinical experience for over 6 months and no relevant clinical experience for well over a year. I was lucky to have someone who ran through every single first aid case with me. Full hpi, physical, and note written under exam like conditions for each practice case. I still felt terrible after the test. Passed, with ICE closer to higher performance and CIS right in the middle. I went very quickly, which probably resulted in the SP's feeling rushed a little, but also let me finish each case, most with time to spare.
I made lots of mistakes, forgot to order critical tests, and was unsure about whether physical exam findings were positive or negative for many cases (I still am not good at feeling for livers, for example, and there are many examples). This made me worry that they would think I was lying when I reported an incorrect PE finding. Vague plans when summarizing and counseling. Sometimes had pretty weak differentials. I forgot tons of patient comfort stuff (because my practice routine didn't include a clinic bed.) The key for me was practicing the whole encounter a lot and having a system that I did every single time, and time limits for each section. Sure, I missed stuff that my system didn't include, but I was consistent for each case. I did not miss things like sexual history, substance use, and things like weight loss in ROS. Plus, it takes pressure off, because you can go into robot mode. You may miss obvious stuff, but you'll cover enough things that you'll probably pass like me.
I post this to offer a brief respite from the ravages of intense anxiety and neuroticism from those of you who are still awaiting scores. May reading this post provide an oasis as you imagine yourself passing after feeling badly after the test. I know that it will fade soon and you'll be back to your anxiety, but, maybe, while reading this sentence, you can tell yourself that everything will probably be OK you big dumb type A worrywort.