Dr. Prakriti Gandhi
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Punjab Institute Of Medical Sciences |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am trained mainly in general medicine but my work slowly expanded into paediatrics, emergency care and even preventive health. Over time I realised that treating patients across age groups and very different backgrounds shaped me into a doctor who can adapt to many situations, sometimes you need to move fast in emergency cases, sometimes you need to sit longer and listen carefully in preventive or chronic health care. My focus always remain on accurate diagnosis and safe management but I try to keep my approach flexiblle, because no two patients are ever the same.
Working with children taught me patience and empathy, while adult medicine sharpened my skills in handling complex complaints like infections, lifestyle disease, and long term management of chronic problems. In emergency care I got exposure to high pressure decision making, airway support, trauma stabilisation etc., and that gave me confidence to act quickly when seconds really matter. Preventive health on other hand taught me how small lifestyle guidance or screening can stop larger problems before they appear.
I like to integrate all these experinces together, balancing between acute care and long term wellness. My way is to keep communication clear and simple, using terms patients understand rather than heavy jargons. At the end, medicine is not just about treatment, it is about building trust, and I try to hold on to that in every patient interaction. |
Achievements: | I am part of different medical organisations over the years like GAIMS, AMSA and IMA-MSN, and honestly those roles helped me grow beyond daily clinical work. Being involved in such groups gave me chance to share ideas, keep in touch with new research and also collabrate with peers across India. Some meetings were hectic, some quiet but each added to my understading of healthcare system. I feel these experinces continue to shape how I approach patient care and medical learning. |
I am a licensed medical doctor with MBBS degree, and till now I hold around 1.5 yrs of clinical expereince that really taught me more than just medicine.. working with people from very diff backgrounds gave me perspective on how illness affect not only the body but also the mind and family life. Most of my work has centered on accurate diagnosis, managing common complaints with clear explanations, and using evidence based treatment whenever possible, because clarity matter a lot when patients are anxious. I focus a lot on building trust in my consultations, sometimes a simple reassurance can be as healing as prescription. In hospital settings I handled outpatient visits, ward duties, and emergency support, which meant moving from routine fevers to more complex cases in a single day, learning to shift gears quickly. I make it a point to explain medical advice in language that is approachable, avoiding heavy jargons unless it is needed, because I want patients to leave knowing what’s going on with thier health. My experience may be shorter compared to seniors but I see it as an advantage too, as I bring energy, curiosity, and willingness to adapt. Every case feels like a new lesson, from managing hypertension or anemia to supporting post-op recovery, and I try to keep myself updated with standard guidelines. I also belive compassionate care is not optional—it is essential. Listening to patients fully, even when they struggle to find the right words, often reveals clues for diagnosis that no test can capture. I continue to grow my clinical skills day by day, aiming to balance detail oriented diagnosis with practical solutions. Medicine is never about rushing to finish, its about patience, empathy and right timing. That’s what I carry with me into each interaction, hoping to make a difference in small but steady ways.