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Dr. Mohd Azhar Uddin
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Dr. Mohd Azhar Uddin

Dr. Mohd Azhar Uddin
M.M Polyclinic Hafez Baba Nagar Hyderabad
Doctor information
Experience:
8 years
Education:
Dr. N.T.R University Of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am someone who's done a diploma in diabetology n honestly that opened up a whole different side of clinical work for me. I dealt with a lot of patients having uncontrol diabetes – the stubborn kind where sugars don’t respond the usual way. Some were already showing signs of complications like diabetic foot, which yeah, can go bad real quick if not caught early. Seen cases where small wounds just didn’t heal for weeks or even got worse cause sugars were all over the place. That kind of stuff makes you think beyond just adjusting insulin doses. Most ppl don’t realise how complex diabetes can get... it’s not just about one sugar reading. There were folks with mixed issues, like BP or cholesterol piling on, others with vague complaints that ended up being sugar-related. I kinda started paying more attention to lifestyle blocks, missed meds, wrong timing — that hidden stuff nobody talks much about. I don’t believe in rushing to start too many tablets unless really needed. I like to figure what’s *really* stopping them from improving, even if it takes a bit longer than usual.
Achievements:
I am someone who finished two fellowships that honestly kinda shaped the way I work today. One in Critical Care Medicine and the other in Diabetology — both were from Medvarsity, and yeah they’re accredited by Royal Liverpool Academy in the UK which was a big deal for me tbh. The critical care part helped me handle ICU situations with more clarity, not just protocols but actual on-ground stuff. And diabetology gave me a way deeper look into sugar issues, like what actually causes the long-term mess. Managing emergencies and chronic cases back to back isn’t easy, but these fellowships sort of made that switch feel smoother. And yep, lot of work... long hours, missed weekends, but kinda worth it now that I look back.

I am a General Practitioner with a pretty wide range of clinical experience, both in hospital-based care and telemedicine setups. My journey started with an internship at Fathima Institute of Medical Sciences, which honestly gave me a good taste of real-time hospital life — the rush, the unpredictability, and just figuring things out while you’re in it. I spent four years at Aware Gleneagles Global Hospitals in L.B. Nagar, Hyderabad, where I was handling a mix of cases, from routine medical issues to some high-pressure emergency stuff. That place really sharpened my reflexes and made me more confident with patient decision-making. After that, I worked for about 3 yrs as the Chief Medical Officer at Sri Radhika Multispeciality Hospital, Balapur. That role was quite different. More responsibility, obviously, and had to manage things beyond just patient care — team coordination, protocol supervision, you know, those kind of things that don’t get taught in med school. At the same time, I was also doing freelance on-call shifts in various other hospitals, mostly covering ICU duties. I’ve independently managed 20-bedded ICU and Emergency units, sometimes for whole night shifts. Tough days... but I’d say those nights taught me what medical resilience actually means. On the digital side, I’ve been doing teleconsultation for quite a while now. I worked as a GP with Mosaic Wellness and also with Truemed’s online platform. Telemedicine’s been a good shift — not easy at first, but I figured out how to guide patients even when I can't physically examine them. Definitely helped me build stronger communication skills and pattern recognition — not everything needs a CT scan right away, sometimes just listening does the job. Still learning honestly, and still trying to get better at connecting with each person who reaches out, whether online or at the bedside. Not a fan of overcomplicating things — I just try to keep it straight and do what’s needed without wasting time. Some days go smooth, some don’t... but that’s part of the job I guess.