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Dr. Surbhi Bansal Agrawal

Dr. Surbhi Bansal Agrawal

Dr. Surbhi Bansal Agrawal
New life hospital and Fetal Medicine centre, Nagpur
Doctor information
Experience:
14 years
Education:
People's College Of Medical Sciences And Research Center
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am someone who kinda got pulled toward internal medicine because of how layered it is—like nothing’s ever just one thing. I work mostly with adults, treating all sorts of chronic conditions but also trying to help people understand what their body’s telling them before it gets loud. I focus a lot on diabetes, high BP, thyroid disorders (esp hypothyroid), lipid problems, weight gain issues, plus areas folks usually avoid like sexual wellness. I lean hard into evidence-based stuff, yeah, but honestly, numbers and guidelines only work if they make sense to the person I’m treating. I try to customize care, like real care—not just the meds and test charts but how your lifestyle, stress, and even sleep is tangled up with it. I read a lotta journals, always updating my methods, but I don’t push trends unless they actually work for the person in front of me. And sure, sometimes it means walking through basics again and again, or tweaking diet plans slowly—whatever gets someone to stick with it for the long haul. My goal isn’t to just “manage” these conditions—it’s more like helping ppl take back a bit of control, little by little. Health isn’t a straight line, and I try not to make patients feel like they’ve failed if it’s messy sometimes. Honestly, the best part is when someone messages a few weeks later like hey my sugars are stable or I’m feeling lighter in my body—those small shifts, they matter more than ppl think.
Achievements:
I am someone who saw first-hand how unpredictable things got during covid—no one really knew what’s next, right? During that time, I was doing round-the-clock online consults from home, trying to keep up with patient after patient, many of them alone or scared or unsure whether to go to the hospital or wait. I mean, it wasn’t easy for anyone but yeah, remote care made a big difference. I stuck to evidence-based treatment, adjusting meds on calls, checking symptoms, helping ppl decide when they really needed oxygen or just rest and monitoring. Honestly, those convos weren’t just medical—they were part emotional too. And I kept doing this for weeks, months. Didn’t matter if someone was calling late night with a panic attack or asking basic stuff like "do I need another test"—I tried to answer clearly. To be real, some outcomes still haunt me, but I also know some folks got through it because we acted in time, and that’s something I carry with me now.

I am Dr. Surbhi Agrawal, a consultant physician & diabetologist, and yeah—it’s kinda hard to sum up everything in one go, but here’s where I’ll start. I work out of Newlife Hospital in Nagpur right now, and most of my time goes into caring for patients both in-person and online (which honestly has its own rhythm). I try to keep my consultations rooted in science but also real-life practical. Everyone’s got different bodies, lifestyles, worries—your treatment should reflect that, not be copy-pasted. My key focus is diabetes care—managing sugars, guiding on insulin or meds, helping people understand their bodies better. But it doesn’t stop there. I deal a lot with obesity, hormonal things like thyroid problems, infections (including COVID-related ones), plus skin and hair concerns that sneak into the picture more often than you’d think. I’ve also worked quite a bit around allergies, nutrition imbalances, and issues around sexual wellness which patients usually hesitate to talk about, but shouldn’t have to. I’ve always felt like just giving prescriptions isn’t enough—sometimes you gotta talk it out, decode the symptoms behind the silence. That’s where I try to lean in with my patients. Listen more, speak clearly, and not throw complicated jargon unless I need to (and when I do, I break it down). Whether you're dealing with a long-term condition or something that cropped up suddenly, I want you to feel like there’s space to ask and be heard. I stay updated—digging through research, listening to patient stories, and adapting. There’s new stuff all the time, especially in areas like endocrinology and internal medicine. But to me, empathy’s still the thing that holds it all together. If you’re struggling with symptoms or just confused about what’s going on with your health—reach out. I’m here for support, science & solutions... in whatever mix that works for you.