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Dr. Gauri
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Dr. Gauri

Dr. Gauri
Anjana : The Parashari Hospital Wazirganj
Doctor information
Experience:
10 years
Education:
Chhathrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj University
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am a specialist in Community Medicine, which for me means looking beyond just one patient at a time and focusing on health of entire groups, families, sometimes whole populations. My work deals with prevention and control of diseases, health promotion, and making sure medical care actually reaches where it’s needed the most. In community settings you see patterns that don’t show up in clinics—like how lifestyle, sanitation, nutrition, education all connect to illness. I work with areas such as epidemiology, maternal and child health, infectious disease control, and also the growing burden of non-communicable disease like diabetes, hypertension, cancers. Community Medicine also means training people, building awareness, and guiding policies that can reduce risks before they become crises. I enjoy being involved in preventive programs—whether vaccination drives, screening camps, or health education sessions. Each step creates ripple effect, reaching many more people than one-to-one consultation. For me, the goal is not only treating disease but also creating healthier communities where prevention is stronger than cure.
Achievements:
I am involved in research that connects directly with real health problems in community. I have published papers on maternal and child health, also on topics like tobacco addiction, self medication, mobile addiction and malnutrition. These works came out in good journals and each study was kind of a reminder that issues we see everyday in clinics actually need bigger attention. Writing them down, sharing data, it helped me contribute a bit towards building awareness and better health practice.

I am a doctor who did my MBBS and MD from BHU, Varanasi—those years shaped the base of my medical journey. The training there was rigorous, but it also gave me a solid mix of clinical skill and real-world exposure. BHU is one of those places where you don’t just learn from books, you learn by watching hundreds of patients walk in every single day, each with a different background, a different story. During my MBBS I built my fundamentals—history taking, clinical examination, that habit of not missing small details. Later, MD training helped me go deeper, sharpening diagnostic skills, managing complex cases, and learning to take responsibility for outcomes. Working in wards and emergency setups taught me how unpredictable medicine can be. Some days were all about stabilizing critical patients, other days about guiding families through long-term care plans. I look at medicine not just as treating illness but as understanding the whole patient. Disease doesn’t exist in isolation—it’s tied to lifestyle, family, mental stress, even the social conditions people live in. That’s something BHU training always emphasized: holistic care. Over the years I’ve handled both common conditions and complicated ones. Whether it’s a straightforward fever, metabolic disorders, or multi-organ cases, I approach each patient with the same priority—listen, explain clearly, and treat systematically. Communication matters to me a lot, cause I know patients and families often feel lost in medical jargon. I prefer not to rush. If someone has doubts, I take time to clear them, even if it means longer consultations. At the same time, I believe in evidence-based practice—using what’s proven while staying updated with newer approaches. Looking back, I feel grateful for the grounding that BHU gave me. It wasn’t always easy, the workload was heavy, the nights in hospital endless, but those experiences shaped how I practice today—with discipline, empathy, and a commitment to never take shortcuts in patient care.