Dr. Dilshad Alam
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Aryabhatta Knowledge University |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working in general medicine but my training and interest also spread into gastroenterology and emergency medicine. In general practice I manage common but important problems like fever, infections, diabetes or blood pressure, the kind of conditions that affect daily life quietly until they become serious. Gastro cases keep me busy with patients having acidity, liver issues, gastric pain or bowel disturbances, sometimes simple indigestion and other times chronic disease that need close monitoring.
Emergency medicine is another area I handle, and honestly it pushes me the most. In emergencies there is no time for long thinking, decisions must be fast yet correct. It can be chest pain that turn out cardiac, severe trauma, poisoning or sudden breathing difficulty, each situation different but all urgent. I try to stay calm under pressure, even when the room feel chaotic.
Working across these fields makes me more balanced as a doctor, because I see both routine and critical cases everyday. My approach is practical – listen first, investigate what is really needed, and then plan treatment that is doable for the patient. I remind myself that even small symptoms matter, and sometimes what look minor hides something serious. |
Achievements: | I am proud to say my biggest achievement is always around patient well being. For me success is not about titles or numbers, it is when someone walk in sick and later goes home better, sometimes even smiling again. I try to keep focus on simple things like listening properly, making treatment plans clear, following up when needed. Each recovery, small or big, feels like reward. Maybe that sounds basic but honestly that’s the core of why I choosed medicine in first place!! |
I am a doctor who finished my MBBS from govt medical college and that was the real starting point for me in medicine. After that I trained in different areas like gastro, cardiology, ortho and also emergency medicine while working under highly skilled doctors in a superspeciality hospital. Those rotations were tough, sometimes confusing too, but each one added a new layer to my understanding of how the body works and how patients need different kind of care in each situation. In gastro I spent time learning about digestive system diseases, from simple gastritis to complicated liver issues. In cardiology I saw how heart problems can suddenly change someone’s life, one day they walk in with chest pain and next moment its an emergency. Ortho gave me exposure to bone and joint cases, fractures, arthritis, injuries that affect daily movement and quality of life. And emergency medicine, probably the most intense of all, taught me how to act quickly when time is short and the stakes are very high. Right now I am working as a general physician and emergency care provider. My day can start with routine fever or cough, shift into managing hypertension or diabetes, and then suddenly turn into an emergency case needing immediate stabilisation. I like the variety, though sometimes it feels exhausting, but I know this is what keeps me sharp. Patients come with all kinds of concerns and I try to give time to each, even if the waiting room is busy. What matters most to me is building trust with people. They may not always understand medical terms, but they understand when a doctor listens and explains patiently. I keep my approach practical, focusing on evidence based medicine but also adjusting to what is possible for each patient. It’s not always perfect, outcomes vary, but I try to keep honest and supportive throughout. Every day in this role adds to my learning, and I see myself growing with every patient I meet.