Dr. Bheruram Netar
Experience: | 4 years |
Education: | Semey State Medical University |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am working as general physician consultant and over time I realised this role demand a mix of wide knowledge and quick adaptability. My day often involve patients with diabetes, hypertension, fevers, gastric problems, or respiratory issues, but also many unexpected complains that need careful evaluation. General medicine is broad, and that’s what interest me the most, cause every case is like different puzzle. Sometimes it’s simple viral, other times hidden cardiac issue or metabolic imbalance.
I focus on evidence based diagnosis but also give space for patient’s history and lifestyle factors, cause without knowing background treatment may fail. Explaining things in clear way is important to me, many patients are anxious and half informed, they just want someone who listen and not rush. In opd I balance efficiency with empathy, making sure each person feels they are heard.
My work also include preventive healthcare, guiding people on diet, physical activity, sleep, and stress managment. As consultant, I learnt that early intervention reduce complications and improve quality of life. Chronic conditions like hypertension or diabetes need more than pills, they need long term monitoring, lifestyle counselling and follow up, and I try to integrate that into my practice.
Emergency situations also come across, where rapid decision making matter. Whether it is severe allergic reaction, dengue fever, or uncontrolled sugar levels, I act quickly but with calm approach. Over the years this experince made me more confident but still aware that medicine is full of uncertainties. Each case is a reminder to stay updated and grounded. |
Achievements: | I am proud that during my undergraduation I was awarded as the best student, a recognition that still keep me motivated in my medical journey. That award was not just about grades, it reflected consistent effort, clinical interest and dedication to patient care even at student level. For me it was a sign that discipline and curiosity in learning actually pay off. It also remind me to continue updating skills and never take knowledge for granted. |
I am working in general medicine opd from 3 years now and that gave me wide exposure to all kind of patients walking in with different complain, sometimes mild, sometimes really serious. Most common I handle are seasonal allergies, gestational issues during pregnancy, diabetes and hypertension, but I also see cases of infections like dengue or malaria that need quick attention. In OPD you never know what the next case will be, one moment its a child with fever and next a adult with uncontrolled blood sugar, and I learnt to switch fast and think clear. I focus on proper diagnosis first, using detailed history and examination rather than rushing, cause many conditions overlap and can confuse. For example a viral fever might look like dengue in early days, or hypertension can stay hidden till it shows as headache or dizziness. I try to explain to patients in simple words what is happening with their health, as many come with fear and half information. Making them comfortable and giving them trust matters more than only prescribing medicines. Over these years I also developed a flexible approach in management, not every patient need same treatment plan. Like gestational diabetes require a very diff care compared to a young person with type 1 diabetes. Lifestyle counselling became important part of my practice, talking about diet, exercise, sleep routine and follow-up. Even with allergies or seasonal flu, guiding them on prevention and hygiene reduce re-occurence a lot. In opd practice volume is high and decision making has to be quick but safe. Sometimes you only have a few minutes, still I try to balance efficiency with personal care. Seeing patients recover and come back with gratitude motivate me everyday. Working across such diverse case made me more confident, but also humble because medicine is never fully predictable. There are times I doubt, recheck, ask for labs before final call, and I think that caution is also strength.