Dr. Deepika Bishnoi
Experience: | |
Education: | HBT Medical College and Dr. R.N. Cooper Municipal General Hospital |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am a doctor with MBBS and MD in Community Medicine, which kinda shaped the way I look at healthcare — not just one patient at a time, but bigger picture too. My main area of work is public health, lifestyle diseases, preventive care, and guiding patients before things go out of hand. Like why wait for BP to hit 170/100 when you can catch the trend early? I deal a lot with conditions like diabetes, hypertension, obesity n’ stress-related stuff that doesn’t always get taken seriously till it’s too late.
Community medicine taught me how health isn't only about treatment — it’s about awareness, screening, and helping ppl change what’s not working. I also consult in primary care as a general physician, mostly helping patients manage long-term issues through practical steps — nothing overcomplicated, just consistent, doable advice that actually fits in their life.
I work with a mix of patients — some just want a checkup, others need guidance with meds, diet, or even just decoding confusing lab reports. And honestly, I enjoy that part... making healthcare feel less scary and more like a team thing, not a lecture. |
Achievements: | I am someone who actually enjoy sharing knowledge not just applying it. I won *Session Best Oral Poster* for my scientific research paper — kinda proud moment cause the topic was close to what I deal with day to day. It wasn’t just about data, but explaining it in a way people actually cared to listen. I’ve also conducted multiple training sessions for Medical Officers on Non-Communicable Diseases — real hands-on stuff, not just slides. It felt good being able to help bridge that gap in practical field care. |
I am a medical doctor with MBBS and MD in Community Medicine from Mumbai. Right now I mostly consult as a general physician, but with a bit more focus on lifestyle-related issues — things like diabetes, high BP, obesity, and all those sneaky conditions that don’t always shout loudly at first but can totally mess with long-term health if ignored. I don’t just hand over prescriptions and call it a day... I try to understand what’s behind the symptoms too — eating habits, sleep issues, stress triggers, stuff like that. Hypertension and diabetes are two areas I see a lot of, and my approach is more on the holistic side. That means yes, I use standard treatment protocols, but I also talk about nutrition, activity, and sometimes just plain routine changes that people can actually stick to. Doesn’t mean fancy diets or weird routines. Just realistic, doable changes that help over time. I guess you can call that preventive mindset? I also worked in paediatrics for a year, which honestly taught me tons about patient communication. If you can calm a crying toddler while explaining meds to a nervous parent, you learn how to handle pretty much anything in OPD. That time shaped how I talk to patients even now — I try not to rush, and I don’t throw jargon unless someone actually wants deep info. Nutrition is something I’m quite into — not like full-time dietician level maybe, but enough to guide patients with simple, effective changes that actually matter. Junk food, sugar overload, poor hydration… these things keep coming up in chronic cases, and unless we address them early, meds alone won't fix much. Preventive medicine is the core of how I see healthcare. Catch problems early, explain things well, and help patients build habits that reduce their need for too many meds later on. I don’t think of myself as just a GP ticking symptoms — I’m here to guide people through changes they may not even realise they need until it’s too late.