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Dr. Murtaza Manzoor
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Dr. Murtaza Manzoor

Dr. Murtaza Manzoor
GMC Rajouri
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
University Of Jammu
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am an MBBS doctor with a focus on general clinical medicine, which basically means I look at the full picture—headaches, cough, stomach pain, fatigue, fever that won’t go away, random swellings, or just anything that feels "off" but no one knows why yet. I deal with the kind of cases that land up first at the family doctor or emergency ward. Sometimes it's infection, sometimes it’s lifestyle, and at times, it’s something you wouldn’t even guess on day one. I don’t lock myself into just one organ system or specialty because I think early diagnosis needs a wide lens. I’ve trained to manage both acute and chronic conditions, support primary care, and know when something needs more in-depth work-up or referral. My goal is always to understand what the patient’s body is trying to say—even when it’s messy, vague, or contradicting itself. General medicine is honestly challenging, like not everything shows up in tests, and people don’t always come with textbook symptoms. That’s where I stay sharp.
Achievements:
I am someone who really keeps patients' well being right at the center of what I do — like that’s always my north star, y’know? Doesn’t matter if it’s a minor complain or somthing way more serious, I try to see the whole person not just a diagnosis. My biggest achievement honestly? Patients who walk out feeling better, not just cured but like actually cared for. Health isn’t just lab values, it’s also peace of mind, and I keep chasing that balance even when it’s not simple.

I am an MBBS doctor with full-time clinical training and hands-on experience across general medicine, surgery, emergency care and honestly whatever walks into OPD or ER on any random day. I’ve managed all sorts of patients—from high fevers that just wouldn’t go away to breathlessness, weird chest pains, infections, gut issues, even those undiagnosed cases where nothing is adding up but the patient’s clearly not okay. I learnt early on that diagnosis isn't just about checking symptoms off a list. Sometimes it's gut, sometimes it’s pattern. I rely on clinical signs, solid history taking, and lab + imaging support when needed. But I don’t jump to conclusions fast—I’ve seen how that backfires. Treating is one part but explaining to patients in words that *actually* make sense to them? That’s something I focus on a lot. I try to break things down without losing accuracy…though yeah not everyone listens fully the first time. Happens. I don’t box myself into one specialty right now because honestly general practice gives you the widest scope. Whether it’s BP out of control or post-viral fatigue or someone just super anxious about a cough—they all come to us first. Knowing when to treat, when to refer, and when to just *listen* is something I’m still working on, tbh. Anyway, I believe good medicine is half knowledge, half patience. You treat the disease but you also treat the person living with it. That’s where I try to keep my focus.