Dr. Pratham Kore
Experience: | 9 years |
Education: | Bharathi Vidyapeeth Medical College Sangli |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am someone who took the usual MBBS route but kinda knew early I’d be going the ortho way. Did my MBBS first, then pushed through D.Ortho which honestly was both draining n addictive—there’s somethin about realigning bones that feels weirdly satisfying. Later I went ahead with MRCS, which gave me a broader surgical edge I guess, helped me see things with a more global kinda perspective.
I mostly stick to core orthopedic stuff—fracture management, joint probs, basic trauma care... and yeah sometimes the plan looks clean on paper but the body has its own mind, right? Each case is a mix of textbook + gut feeling. I'm not just chasing alignment or pain relief but trying to give the person behind the X-ray their comfort, mobility, and routine back, even if that takes a few extra sessions or slight plan tweaks.
I don’t always follow straight lines—every pt is diff, every bone behaves diff. Guess that’s what keeps me hooked to ortho life. |
Achievements: | I am trained in both ortho & general surgery—didn't wanna limit myself too early i guess. I kinda grew into this space where I now work across almost all major surgical fields, not just bone stuff. Had to learn fast, observe even faster. Over time, I picked up solid depth in other areas too—GI, urology, a bit of vascular here n there. I won’t claim to know it *all*, but I def walk in with a fair understanding of the big picture when a case comes in, even if messy. |
I am working in this field since a lil over 6 and a half years now—honestly didn’t feel that long till I sat down n counted lol. Over time I kinda found my pace between clinical skill and patient-handling (which btw is just as imp as drills n tools if you ask me). Most of my work revolves around restorative dentistry, root canal treatments, crown cuttings, crown lengthening, and post n core procedures... sometimes even all of that in a single week. I’ve done my share of tough cases, and yeah not every day goes perfect but you learn fast—like how each tooth can surprise you, no matter how many you've treated. My focus has always been to make the treatment smooth for the patient—less pain, fewer sittings (if possble), and better long-term results. I’m def not the type to rush, but I also get that patients don’t wanna sit in the chair forever either. I try to keep my techniques updated—went to that AI workshop for dental tech stuff, which was kinda mindblowing tbh. And I had a paper published too, in the *International Journal of Scientific Research*, which felt like a big step for me, not gonna lie. Outside of clinic life, I dance. Classical. Sounds off-topic maybe but weirdly helps with focus n stamina. Anyway, after 6+ years in this line, I can say each case still teaches me something new. Not every tooth follows textbook, not every patient walks in ready to trust. And maybe that’s what keeps me goin—finding that balance, day after day.