Dr. Namisha Sharma
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru Govt Medical College |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on the kind of care that starts at the very first moment — like Basic Life Support, early patient evaluation, those critical first steps where you can’t really afford to mess up. I don’t overthink too much when there’s an emergency… just follow the flow I’ve trained for. Stabilize, assess, act fast. That’s what I do.
Apart from the emergencies, I’m also into general inpatient care — things like monitoring vitals, keeping track of small shifts, coordinating with seniors when things feel off but not yet obvious. Those quiet changes in a patient’s condition? I try not to miss those.
Basic diagnostics and simple procedures, yeah I handle that — blood draws, ECGs, IV lines, you name it. And the talking part too, not just the doing. I believe in *talking* to patients properly, not just handing out instructions. Good communication, patient counselling — these aren't add-ons, they're literally part of the treatment in my opinion.
Spelling might slip sometimes (in-paient or inpatiant? I mix em up lol), but I’m there, doing what’s needed — even if that means repeat explanation or just listening for a bit longer than usual. |
Achievements: | I am not too flashy with medals n all that, but yeah — I was state topper in both junior quiz *and* senior quiz during med school days (still not sure how I pulled off both tbh). Also got picked best in case presentation more than once, which I liked ‘cause I enjoy breaking down complex stuff into something that actually makes sense to everyone.
Was also the one handling my college’s social media for 2 yrs — making content, updating events, sharing academic stuff. Bit chaotic sometimes.. but fun!! |
I am a Medical Officer who kinda ended up wearing multiple hats — from direct patient care to managing a bit of the chaos behind the scenes. I work with this mindset that patient wellbeing isn’t just about writing a Rx and walking away... it’s also how you run the system around them. Clean OPD flow, emergency handovers, even small things like making sure meds are in stock — all that matters. And yeah, I care about all of it, probably more than I should sometimes. My work has touched a mix of areas like emergency medicine, general opd, chronic disease follow-ups, and a lot of public health tasks too. On days, I might be managing trauma response or fever cases, and the next I’m out in the field for vaccination drive or checking the flow of a screening program that’s going sideways again. It's this mix that keeps things grounded — like you're not just doctoring in a room, you're part of a bigger system that’s constantly shifting. I like being hands-on. If something’s not right in a protocol or a patient’s treatment course isn’t showing results, I dig into it — even if it takes time or extra forms or chasing down the lab guy who went for tea. Not saying I get it all right. There are days it’s exhausting and you feel like nothing moved, but when one patient comes back saying they're better? makes it worth sticking to. I'm not big on titles or fancy seminars, but I do care about the *doing* part of medicine. And that means staying updated, adapting fast esp during emergencies, and also listening — like really listening, which gets missed often these days. Bit of grammar might go wrong here n there, and I might write “opd” instead of “OPD” once or twice.. but what matters is that I show up, do the job with full intent. Whether it’s community health or acute care, I want to be useful where it counts.