Dr. Udit Singh
Experience: | 9 years |
Education: | Maulana Azad Medical College |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am working mainly with mental health issues right now, but my focus kinda goes beyond that. I specialize in treating a wide range of psychological problems, yeah like anxiety, mood disrders, sleep troubles—but also sexual health concerns and couple therapy. Some days are about helping someone get through panic attacks, other days I’m sitting with couples who feel miles apart even sitting together. Both are tough in there own way.
I’m also doing work as a sexologist which ppl often find hard to talk about at first (understandable), but once they open up—real healing kinda starts from there. Many times sexual dysfunction or frustration isn't just physical, there's a deeper emotional story playing underneath. That’s where I come in. I try not to just look at symptoms—I look at patterns, comunication blocks, emotional mismatch, and help clients see their relationships or their own self with more clarity.
In marital counselling, it’s often less about who’s right or wrong & more about what’s not being said. I try to create space where both partners feel heard, like truly. It ain’t perfect everytime, I make mistakes too, but I keep learning. Every session feels different. Every person has a different pace. And that’s what keeps this job both challenging and rewarding somehow!! |
Achievements: | I am one of those who was always kinda into bio & health from school itself. Topped my batch in the medical stream back then (wasn’t easy but somehow pulled it off). Later I did both my undergrad and postgrad from one of the top med colleges in India — felt super lucky honestly, coz the exposure there was insane!! Learned from great professors, handled real complex cases early on. Honestly not every day was smooth but those years shaped how I work today. Still learning though.. always. |
I am working as a psychiatrist since last 4 years—yeah, time kinda flew by. From day one, I knew I didn’t want to just hand out pills and tick checkboxes. I always leaned toward a more holistic kinda care, you know... where therapy, lifestyle, and patient’s story all matters just as much as the DSM codes. Mental health isn’t one-size-fit-all, and honestly it shouldn’t be treated that way. Most of my work deals with anxiety, depression, mood disorders, sleep issues, and lately I’ve been seeing more patients dealing with trauma-related things too. Every case comes with it’s own set of challenges—and I kinda like that unpredictabillity?? keeps me learning every day. I try not to just focus on symptoms, I prefer going deeper, figuring out what really going on behind them. Sometimes it's messy, sometimes slow, but that’s what makes it real. I do believe in medication when its needed, sure, but I also keep pushing myself to stay updated with newer approaches. From CBT to lifestyle-based interventions and even digital therapeutics (yep, those are getting big), I like mixing the conventional with the latest. Not all tools work for all ppl, so having more in the toolbox helps. Been advocating for mental health in small ways—talks, community work, even social media if that counts lol. Still got a lot to learn (and unlearn) and honestly I'm okay with that. Because the day I stop being curious is probably the day I stop being a good doc. Right now, I'm mostly working in clinical settings—outpatient care, counseling sessions, follow-ups. But I make space for listening. Like actually listening to what someone’s going through, without jumping into diagnosis-mode too soon. I think patients notice that. Or atleast I hope they do.