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Dr. Divyansh Kumawat
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Dr. Divyansh Kumawat

Dr. Divyansh Kumawat
Dr. Divyansh Kumawat 139b Tirupati Nagar A Charan Nadi Murlipura Jaipur Rajasthan
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
SMS Medical College
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am about to start my post graduation this year, so in terms of fixed specialization I dont have much to claim yet.. but that doesn’t mean I didn’t find areas I am drawn to during my mbbs and internship. Right now my focus is on building stronger clinical base, sharpening skills that cut across dept like general medicine, opd managment, emergency care, even exposure to surgical wards. I learnt that every rotation adds something, even small like improving venous access or getting more confident in handling patient history. I try to look at specialization not just as a title but as a direction I am slowly walking into. For now I see myself interested in internal medicine and related fields, but I also keep my mind open, because working in govt setups showed me how wide the need really is. One week you are handling infection cases, next week elderly patients with multiple comorbidities, and then young kids with acute issues. This variation actually keep me motivated. While I dont yet hold an official advanced degree in any branch, I take pride in having sound understanding of clincial skills, patient communication and an approach that sees beyond single disease. I like to explain things in simple words, and sometimes just listening is more powerful than prescribing. As I step into post graduation, my aim is to use the experience I already gained and move towards more depth, whichever field I end up choosing. For me this is a transition point, but still important part of my professional growth.
Achievements:
I am glad that besides my mbbs training I made time to complete few extra courses which gave me wider view on patient care. I finished the IDF certficate in diabetology, also a course on hypertension managment and another one on mental healthcare. Each one taught me different aspect, like how chronic conditions need long term follow up and how mental health often get ignored in opd. These may look like small add ons but they shaped the way I now see patients.

I am a medical graduate and I completed my degree from a reputable institution where I also went through the mandatory one year rotatory internship that exposed me to almost every dept of clinical medicine. Those months were long and some days felt never ending but I got real hands on experiance in OPDs, wards, even emergency and minor procedures. What stayed with me is not only the knowledge of disease but the way patients look at their own illness. I learnt early that treating just a symptom or single diagnosis isnt enough, the real challenge is to see the patient as a whole, to understand how their lifestyle, family, stress, small daily habits all play into recovery. Sometimes the answer is simple treatment, sometimes it is a mix of counselling, preventive steps and medicine. I still carry that approach in my daily practice. When I sit with a patient I try not to rush, I want to hear the small details, the part they think unimportant. Because often those parts give the clue. I focus on holistic patient care, where general medicine overlaps with preventive health, lifestyle modification and long term well-being. The internship also gave me confidence to work under pressure, managing routine as well as complex cases. From inserting IV lines, catheters, assisting in deliveries, handling inpatient records, or stabilizing a patient in distress – each experience taught me something about both science and responsibility. My training also shaped how I communicate. I prefer using simple words, no heavy jargon, so patients and families can actually feel safe and understand what is happening. I don’t claim to know all the answers but I always try to look deeper and give care that is both rational and empathetic. For me the goal is not just to fix a lab value or acute problem, but to help patients feel they are being seen and treated as a person. That’s what keeps me grounded in medicine and also keeps me learning everyday.