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Dr. Pratyush Jain
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Dr. Pratyush Jain

Dr. Pratyush Jain
Civil Hospital Begumganj
Doctor information
Experience:
6 years
Education:
Madhya Pradesh Medical Council
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am a doctor with around 2 yrs of hands on experience managing both emergency department and busy OPD in a fully working hospital setup. In ER I learnt how to triage quickly, stabilise patients, handle trauma, cardiac arrest, poisoning and many other acute cases that come rushing in without warning. OPD was diferent but equally demanding, where the focus was on long term care, counseling, diagnosis and follow ups. That contrast trained me to switch gears fast. My role often required coordinating between nursing staff, lab teams and senior consultants to make sure the workflow not break. Many times resources were limited but still patients expect timely care, so I adapted and improvised. Communication became as important as procedures, because explaining conditions and treatment in a simple way reduce anxiety for patients and family. These 2 years gave me clarity that I am most comfortable in high-pressure settings but also value continuity of care. The mix of emergency medicine and general opd taught me to keep balance between speed and accuracy, and it keeps me grounded to what matter most—safe patient care.
Achievements:
I am a medical officer with more than 2 yrs working in govt hospital where opd load was always heavy and emergencies come unexpected. I managed hundreds of patients daily from fever cases to trauma, making quick decicions when time was less. Handling both chronic and acute illness taught me to stay calm, focus on patient safety and adapt even when resources are short. These experiences shaped my clinical skill and gave me confidence in providing effective patient-centered care.

I am a medical graduate who did my internship in GMC & Hamidiya group of hospital Bhopal, a govt setup where the exposure was pretty intense. That year taught me not just about protocols but about the real side of patient care, dealing with emergencies in casualty, long hours in OPD, monitoring inpatient wards and also assisting in surgical procedures when needed. I even got chance to be part of community health services, which gave me some perspective of how medicine reach people outside the hospital walls. Now I am working as Medical Officer in a govt civil hospital and honestly that role is where all the training came together. Day to day I see very diverse cases, from acute emergencies that need quick action to chronic conditions that require patience and continuity. The skills I learnt in internship—whether inserting IV lines, handling trauma cases, counseling families, or managing a busy ward—are now things I use almost automatically. At the same time, each case is diferent and there is still always something new to think through. One thing I realized is how important balance between clinical skill and communication is. Patients and families often come with confusion, fear, sometimes unrealistic hope. Being able to explain in simple words, being present and steady, matters as much as writing the prescription. In the hospital setting I also coordinate with nurses, junior staff and other specialists which keeps the workflow smoother. I continue to look at myself as a learner. Every shift teaches me something small, like a new way to approach a diabetic patient or subtle signs in a hypertensive case that you don’t want to miss. Being in govt hospital also means resources are not always perfect, so adapting, improvising and still ensuring safe care is a constant part of the work. This path made me appreciate both the science and humanity of medicine in equal measure, and it keeps me grounded in what the real aim is—better health outcomes for people who come to us.