Dr. Mitesh kumar sharma
Experience: | 9 years |
Education: | Government Medical College, Miraj |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am a DNB-qualified ENT specialist and my work mostly revolves around ear, nose, throat—yes the whole package! Whether it’s someone struggling with hearing issues, chronic sinusitis, throat pain or even voice change, I try getting to the root cause instead of just masking symptoms. I do handle lots of ear infections, balance probs, nasal polyps & tonsils... those come in quite often. Minor procedures? yeah I do them, and surgical cases when needed too, depends on the diagnosis tho.
There’s always that fine line in ENT where something looks basic but ends up being trickier than it seems—like a mild snoring issue turning into sleep apnea or a blocked ear not being wax but something deeper. I really try to be careful with small clues, they matter more than ppl think. Also not everyone needs surgery—lot of times a combo of meds, lifestyle tweaks, & regular follow-up makes all the diff.
I honestly think communication is half the job—we explain, not just prescribe. Patients deserve that. I keep learning on the go, guidelines keep changing anyway! |
Achievements: | I am a medical graduate from Govt. Collage Miraj where I did my MBBS—long days, crazy shifts but lots of good learning honestly. Later, I went ahead and did my ENT specialisation in Delhi (that was intense tbh). ENT wasn’t always the plan, but once I got into it I realized how much I liked dealing with these complex yet day-to-day issues ppl face. Training in Delhi gave me real solid exposure..from small OPD cases to major surgeries, it shaped the way I approach care now!! |
I am an MBBS doctor with a little over 10 yrs in this field—kinda hard to sum that all up quickly but yeah, it’s been a mix of stuff really. I’ve worked across hospitals, OPDs, even rural setups, which honestly teach you a lot more than any textbook ever could. Most of my work circles around general medicine, you know—chronic conditions like diabetes, BP, infections, fevers, stomach and chest stuff (those never go away lol). I also get a lot of cases where people just don’t know what’s wrong, they’re tired or off, and that’s when a good listener makes all the diff, not just a good prescriber. Over the years I’ve developed this instinct for catching early signs of things people usually ignore or miss. Like, a mild cough could be nothing or something more serious, and figuring that part out, that’s where I feel confident. I do quite a bit of preventive medicine too—screenings, diet talks, lifestyle advice that people often overlook. And yes, I do see a lot of stress-linked stuff now—sleep issues, acidity, hairfall, low mood—it’s all connected. I’m someone who believes that medical care isn't only about the meds you write. Half the time people want to feel heard and not judged. And no, I’m not perfect—some days are rushed, and some decisions you think back on twice—but I really do try to be the kind of doctor I’d wanna go to myself. No unnecessary tests, no big scary language, just clear straight answers (even if the answer is—I don’t know yet, let’s figure it out). My interest in primary care keeps evolving, but honestly what keeps me going is when a patient tells me they feel better—not just physically but like, mentally lighter too. That’s underrated right? Anyway, whether it’s common colds or complicated histories, I treat everything with the same focus. Medicine can be messy, unpredictable—but that’s also why I don’t get bored. Every day something new shows up. And yeah—still learning, always updating. You can’t just sit on a degree anymore and think you know it all, medicine doesn’t work like that anymore!!