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Dr. Sail Kishor Patil
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Dr. Sail Kishor Patil

Dr. Sail Kishor Patil
Currently looking for Private Clinic Place in Nashik
Doctor information
Experience:
6 years
Education:
Belgorod State University
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am a MBBS grad from Russia, finished in 2019 – which, honestly, feels both recent and forever ago. After that I cleared the FMGE exam in 2021 (not an easy one btw), and then moved on to do a PG Diploma in Family Medicine too. Wasn’t really planning to go down the family medicine route initially, but over time I realised how much I enjoy treating all kinds of patients – young, old, new, chronic, mix of everything. Family medicine just made sense to me.. it’s not just about giving tablets and moving on. Sometimes you’re dealing with things that've been building up for years – BP, sugar, digestion stuff, even sleep issues or those not-sure-what-it-is cases. You don’t always get the answer in one go, and that’s ok. It taught me to see the bigger picture and not jump to conclusions. Right now I work more in primary care setup and honestly, I like that ground level connection. Some days are routine, some full of surprises. There's always this balance of treating symptoms but also looking at lifestyle, habits, family history etc.. kind of like putting pieces together. Spelling might be off here or there haha (did I write “bp” or “BP”??), but I try to stay focused where it matters. Patients first, always.
Achievements:
I am not really into flaunting big stuff, but honestly the one thing I do take pride in is keeping patient’s well-being at the center.. always. Like, I’m not saying I cure everything (nobody does) but I really try to make sure people leave with a plan, or atleast some clarity. Whether it’s managing sugar levels or just listening when someone’s been ignored elsewhere — those small moments kinda feel like the real acheivement!! Maybe not in certificates, but in how they walk back in next time.

I am Dr. Sail Patil (MBBS) and yeah, the path's been kind of layered so far. I worked with the Sir JJ Group of Hospitals for about a year – honestly, that place throws you right into the middle of real-world medicine, not textbook stuff. It taught me a lot about clinical judgement, fast decision-making, patient overload and yep, what it means to hold your ground when you don’t have much time to think. After that, I joined under NHM with KDMC where I managed the OPD, and that setup was totally different but equally challenging in its own way. Most of my work there revolved around outpatient diagnosis and primary care treatment, esp for non-communicable chronic illnesses like diabetes and hypertension. And lemme say — managing chronic lifestyle disorders ain’t as simple as it looks. People come in with confusing symptoms, half-treated from somewhere else, and every now n then I had to kinda break the cycle. Like stop the repeating meds and start fresh with proper plans. At KDMC, I was actively involved in changing the course of treatment where needed – not everyone with high sugar needs the same pills, right? You gotta adjust according to their diet, lifestyle, comorbidities, or even just what they *can* afford. It taught me to be patient, listen properly n not just treat numbers on paper. Some cases were trickier than they looked at first glance. I didn’t chase big titles or post-grad stuff yet – maybe in future, I’m not sure – but what I did get was loads of exposure to ground-level real practice, and that I feel really shaped how I approach patients today. Maybe my grammar slips here or there when I’m typing all this (you’ll see missing comma or two) but when I’m with a patient, I’m fully present. I believe that’s what matters more.