Dr. Shiwangi
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Asian Medical Institute |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am working as RMO in ESIC Bihta from almost a year now—yeah time really moved fast there. Most of my work revolves around internal medicine... emergency cases, patient stabilisation, ward rounds, lots of observation and reporting. I mean, sometimes you're handling back-to-back cases and you just gotta keep your calm n figure things one by one, no matter how hectic it get. I kinda enjoy that pressure in a strange way.
I deal with every patient carefully—whether its a diabetic episode, high BP, breathless situation or just feverish complaints that look mild but end up being smthing else.. You have to see beyond just numbers on the chart. I don’t just follow textbook blindly, I try matching it with what that exact patient needs in that moment. That mindset actually helped me avoid errors or misjudgement on few tight cases.
Over time, I’ve got used to sudden changes, shifts that stretch, staff crunch... but you learn how to still give patients right care, no matter what. Medicine isn't just knowing treatment, its also knowing how to treat when nothing going smooth around you. |
Achievements: | I am someone who kinda kept trying different things during medschool and somehow got selected in multiple competitions related to Medicare n clinical awareness. Not every event I won, but getting through shortlists gave me the push I needed, you know? One was about case-based diagnosis (I remember missing one detail tho lol) and another had more of policy+public health angle. Stuff like this keeps me lil sharp outside regular wardwork, even if its not always fancy awards n all. |
ChatGPT said: I am working as RMO right now in two hospitals—Asian Medical Hospital and ESIC Bihta—and honestly juggling both has given me some solid ground exp that classroom stuff can’t quite match. At Asian, I mostly deal with emergency cases, ward duties, and pre-round patient prep, which means long hours but also quick learning... like real quick. You gotta be on your toes every second, things change before you even finish writing the notes. At ESIC Bihta, it’s a bit different. Lot more focus on government protocols, structured timelines, documentation—plus you get to handle cases involving insured workers n their fams, which bring in a whole different set of clinical and social contexts. I feel I’ve started to understand how socioeconomic factors can change treatment expectations n outcomes... and sometimes even compliance. Most of the time I’m involved with patient monitoring, vital tracking, medication administration, IV line setups, assisting in minor procedures or sometimes stabilizing critical cases until senior consulatant arrives. Nothing too flashy, but each shift is like a puzzle—sometimes you get the easy pieces, sometimes you’re handed chaos wrapped in vitals dropping fast. I do care a lot about keeping patients informed too. I mean they’re scared, confused, tired—most don't really get what’s happening and it helps if someone actually explains stuff in a way they can follow. That’s something I try to do daily, even if in rush. I’m still learning tons, and I know I’ve a long way to go. But each week adds up—each patient, each call at 3AM, each line that won’t cannulate—all that slowly makes you better at handling things. Not perfect by any means, but def more grounded and ready than when I started.