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Dr. Dinesh Chauhan
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Dr. Dinesh Chauhan

Dr. Dinesh Chauhan
Worked as intern at shri b m patil medical college
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
BLDE (Deemed To Be University)
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am more comfortable when working with kids, kind of found my self leaning towards paediatric care during training and daily practice. Handling children is not just about giving medicine, it’s more about patience and trying to understand what they can’t always say clearly. Sometimes a small fever in a child makes parents panic, sometimes it’s a stubborn cough or stomach pain that just won’t settle.. and you need to balance both the child’s comfort n the parent’s worry at same time. I focus on common paediatric cases — infections, growth issues, nutritional advice, routine checkups. I try to keep treatment simple and safe, avoid un-necessary meds where possible. Kids are sensitive to dosage, even small mistake can cause big issue, that’s always on my mind. Communication matter too, like explaining why vaccination is needed or how to manage fever at home without overusing antibiotics. I won’t say I know everything, still learning everyday from each case. But I do feel confident in my skills to manage general paediatric care in a calm n practical way, listening closely and not rushing through. I like giving space to parents to ask questions (sometimes too many!! but that’s fine) because their trust really decides how well the treatment goes.
Achievements:
I am an MBBS graduate and during my course I recieved a gold medal in paediatric, which was honestly a big moment for me cause I had put a lot of effort in that subject. Working with children always felt more challenging yet rewarding, and that award kinda pushed me to focus more there. It’s not just about academics, but also about learning how to handle delicate cases with care. That recognition still remind me to keep up the same dedication in my practice everyday.

I am a fresher doctor, just completed my MBBS in 2024 and starting out in this long road of medicine. Feels like the end of one big chapter but actually it’s just the beginning, right? During MBBS years I had exposure to different departments — medicine, surgery, pediatrics, obgyn — all the rotations that sort of shape how you see patient care. Honestly, every posting taught me something small but practical, like how even a simple fever workup can go wrong if you miss one detail, or how a patient’s trust can be lost if you don’t explain things clearly. I don’t claim any long years of experience yet, but what I bring is freshness of learning, the updated clinical knowledge, and that eagerness to work with patients directly instead of just reading about them. I like working on basics first, like proper history taking and examination. Many seniors always said “if you listen enough, patient tells you the diagnosis,” and I actually noticed that’s often true. I try to follow that, rather than rushing. During internships I got to assist in OPD work, minor procedures, emergency wards.. sometimes long tiring nights, but those were moments that make you realize whether you’re ready for this profession. I made mistakes too, like forgetting to check a vital before writing a note, or mixing patient file with another. Nothing major but still, enough to remind me I need to be careful every step. Right now, as a new general practitioner stepping into real practice, my focus is on learning from each patient interaction. I want to get stronger in primary care, managing common conditions like fever, infections, hypertension, diabetes, gastric issues, things most people struggle with in daily life. I also want to keep refining how I talk to patients — making sure they understand why a medicine is given or why a test matters. Because treatment isn’t just writing a prescription, it’s making sure they actually follow it. I may be fresher but I am motivated to keep learning every day. I don’t see myself as perfect or finished; I see myself as growing into the role of a trusted physician, step by step. Maybe I’ll choose a specialization later, but for now I’m here to serve with what I know, to listen carefully, and to build that trust with patients who come to me.