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Dr. Nipsita Panda
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Dr. Nipsita Panda

Dr. Nipsita Panda
Bhubaneswar, sum hospital
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Sikhsha 'O' Anusadhan Deemed to University
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am working in rehabilitation medicine and nutrition, which for me is about helping people recover not just from illness but also from the impact it leaves behind. In rehab I focus on restoring function after injuries, stroke, surgeries, or chronic conditions that limit daily life. Sometimes progress is slow, sometimes quick, but every small gain like walking few extra steps or moving arm better means a lot. Nutrition goes hand in hand with this, cause without proper diet recovery never reach its full point. I deal with patients who need guidance on balanced diet, weight managment, and nutrition support for conditions like diabetes, cardiac disease or gastric troubles. Many come confused with random advice from internet, and I try to simplify things to what actually works for them. Rehabilitation and nutrition connect closely — good food support healing, and structured rehab give strength back. I like to keep my approach practical, not overloading patients with complex plans they can’t follow. Instead, I focus on small achievable steps that build confidence. Some days are challenging when patients lose hope, but other days their improvement remind me why this specialty matters.
Achievements:
I am working as a professional doctor currently and for me that itself feel like an achievement, cause every day in this field test both knowledge and patience. Being in practice mean I am trusted with people’s health, and that trust is not small thing. My work may not be about big awards but about steady effort — treating patients, guiding them, seeing small improvements. I count it as success when a patient leaves with relief or hope that their condition can be managed better with care.

I am a doctor with 1 year of experience and honestly that one year felt like a crash course into real medicine, nothing like just reading textbooks. The first months were about finding confidence, standing in wards, trying to connect theory with what patients were actually showing in front of me. I managed common cases like fever, infections, stomach complaints, BP checks, but also got pulled into more serious emergencies where every second mattered. Those shifts where you hardly get break make you realise this work is about patience as much as knowledge. Working in different departments gave me a chance to touch both acute and chronic care. One day it’s a child with high fever, next day it’s an old patient with uncontrolled diabetes or breathlessness. Some cases are simple, others confusing, and I learnt fast that no two patients with same diagnosis behave the same. That unpredictability keep me cautious but also curious. I also tried to keep focus on preventive side of things, guiding patients on diet, lifestyle changes, and simple steps that actually reduce complications later. Many people come to doctor only when disease is already advanced, which frustrates me sometimes cause I know early checkups could have saved them lot of pain. But then again it’s part of the job to explain and repeat until it makes sense for them. Being just 1 year into practice I don’t pretend to have all answers. Some days I leave with doubts, replaying what I did and if I should have done differently. Other days I see someone improve and walk out smiling, and that’s enough to remind me why I chose this field. For now my aim is to keep learning, treating with honesty, and making sure every patient feels heard no matter how small or big their problem looks.