Dr. Sourabh Hemanth
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Karpagam Faculty Of Medical Sciences & Research |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working in emergency care and general practice, thats where my focus and daily effort goes. In emergency side I deal with trauma cases, sudden cardiac arrest, respiratory distress, road accident victims, poisoning, strokes, and many more unpredictable situations that come rushing in. It demand quick thinking, clinical skills and sometimes just pure calmness when everything around is chaos. General practice give me a different kind of balance, where I see patients for day to day health issues, infections, hypertension, diabetes, fever, skin problems or follow up after discharge. I learnt to listen closely, because sometimes the key detail comes from what patient say in a hurried way. My role often overlap between stabilising acute cases and providing ongoing care, which keeps me grounded in both critical and routine side of medicine. I try to combine evidence-based treatment with practical solutions suited to each patients condition, whether in casualty or opd. |
Achievements: | I am proud that I completed a certficate course in point of care ultrasound, which made me more confident while dealing with acute and emergency cases where fast imaging matter a lot. Currenty I am also pursuing diploma in family medicine, cause I wanted to expand my scope beyond emergency and get more grip on holistic, long term care. These steps may look small but for me its a continous process of adding skill and improving the way I serve patients everyday |
I am a medical doctor who started my journey in a bit of unusual place, working at Kari Motor speed way race track as track emergency doctor. That was a 6 month role but it taught me more about fast decicions, quick assesment, and handling trauma cases in seconds than I ever imagined. When accidents happen on track there is no time for second thoughts, you learn to trust your training and act immediatly. After that phase I moved into Bishop Alappat Mission hospital where I joined as a Casualty Medical Officer. Here the challanges are different, the flow of patients is constant, accidents, cardiac issues, medical emergencies, some nights felt endless. I learnt to balance clinical judgement with empathy because most patients or families arrive in panic, and my job is to calm and treat at same time. Working in casualty sharpened my emergency medicine skills, from managing airway and resuscitation to stabilizing multi-trauma patients before shifting to ICU or surgery. I also handle OPD spillover when emergency dept gets overloaded, so there’s this constant need to adapt. The exposure I got across both high pressure race track and hospital casualty gave me a wide perspective about patient care. I became more confident in acute care medicine, developed team coordination with nurses and paramedics, and improved my ability to manage high-risk situations. What keeps me going is seeing patients recover, knowing that those few minutes of timely intervention mattered. My focus now is to continue building on this foundation, working in emergency setups where rapid response and clear thinking save lives.