Dr. Simranjit Singh
Experience: | 8 years |
Education: | Government Medical College & Hospital |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | Over the years, I’ve found myself working across quite a few different areas—psychiatry, radiology, orthopaedics, neurology, pulmonary medicine, and good old general medicine too. Each one has taught me something unique. Honestly, having that mix has really helped me look at patients more fully, not just as a case but as a person going through something. From reading a chest X-ray to figuring out the roots of anxiety, I’ve learned how things connect—body and mind, symptoms and systems. Some days it's about catching small details, other days it’s about just sitting and truly listening. I try not to jump to conclusions and always bring a kind of balance into the room, because that’s what I’d want too. There’s no finish line in medicine—you keep learning, and each patient adds to that. That part hasn’t changed, and I hope it never does. |
Achievements: | Got recognised by both the Maharashtra and Delhi Medical Councils—honestly, didn’t expect it, but it felt good. Not just a fancy title or certificate, but a quiet nod that maybe I’m doing something right. It's not about the awards really… it’s knowing that the day-to-day effort doesn’t just disappear into thin air. Someone noticed, and that sorta keeps you going. |
I’ve had the privilege of working across some of Delhi’s most respected government hospitals—Safdarjung, Dr. RML, Lady Hardinge, Charak Palika, and even a brief stint at AIIMS. Each one brought its own pace, pressure, and people, and honestly, nothing can quite prepare you for that kind of real-world clinical exposure until you’re right in the thick of it. In these hospitals, I learned not just about diseases—but about patients. From managing emergency trauma cases at Safdarjung to assisting in maternal and child care at Lady Hardinge, I was thrown into scenarios where both speed and sensitivity mattered. There were nights with barely any sleep, days that blurred into the next, and moments that challenged everything I thought I knew. At RML, I was lucky to work closely with experienced consultants who helped refine my diagnostic skills and decision-making, especially in time-critical cases. AIIMS, of course, was on a whole other level in terms of learning—from rare presentations to multidisciplinary teamwork. It was intense, but it shaped me. I don’t pretend to have it all figured out—honestly, no real doctor should. What I do know comes from real-world experience, not just reading. These days, I focus on being accurate, honest, and treating people like people, not problems. I’m still learning but always trying to show up better than the day before.