Dr. Farahath Jabeen
Experience: | |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on gastro cases, like anything from acid peptic issues to complex abdominal surgeries, and yeah procto cases too—piles, fissure, fistula, all that... sometimes ppl don’t talk about it openly but it seriously affects daily life, and I try to make sure they don’t feel awkward yk. I also regularly handle breast-related cases, benign lumps, infections, and even early-stage malignancies where timely action really matters.
Honestly I like the variety it brings—each case needs a different kind of approach, some straight forward others not that much. I don’t just jump to surgery either, sometimes medical management actually does better... it’s all about reading the case right, not rushing it. Also been assisting in laparoscopic procedures when possible, which adds a tech-side to the usual hands-on stuff. Clinic work is intense but it’s where I learn most too—patients asking why it hurts, what’s the real cause, is it diet or stress or both? All that really makes me rethink even simple symptoms. |
Achievements: | I am someone who really enjoy digging into clinical data and weirdly long hours of research,, and somewhere along the way that led me to win a national award for my paper presentation. It was one of those topics that ppl kinda overlook but actually impacts treatment outcomes big time. Felt good to see that effort was seen and kinda mattered. I dont just present data to impress—I try to find stuff that actually shifts how we manage certain conditions or make protocols better. |
I am working in this field from 3 years now and honestly every day still throws new things at me, like in a good way mostly. I started out focusing on the basics, like just getting comfortable with practicals n protocols and all that... but slowly I kinda leaned into patient interactions more, really trying to get the full picture of what each kid or parent needs—not just the treatment part but the understanding too. I think communication plays a huge part, especially in pediatrics where you’re basically treating the whole family at once sometimes!! Right now my main area is general pediatric care—handling infections, nutrition issues, monitoring growth... and yeah some respiratory cases too that are pretty common. I’ve managed both clinic and ward work, depending on shifts and rotation, and I’m always trying to keep things hands-on. I mean theory helps but real-time response, like during emergencies or when a newborn’s vitals drop—thats where everything kicks in. I’ve also been part of outreach camps and seasonal drives during vaccination weeks n dengue surges, which teaches you a diff kind of planning. Things don’t always go the way you expect outside of the hospital setting but that’s also where you adapt fast. Still learning, still asking questions, still showing up.