Dr. Vandana
Experience: | 13 years |
Education: | Yerevan State Medical University |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working in medicine, dealing with both acute emergencies and long term health conditions that need continous care. Over the years I learnt to manage cases like hypertension, diabetes, infections, gastric and respiratory issues, but also keep focus on overall health rather than just the single illness. I try to combine clinical knowledge with a holistic view, making sure patients feel heard and treatment fit their real life. My interest is broad cause medicine touch almost every system in the body. Some days I focus on OPD cases like fever, skin rash or joint pain, other days I may be in ward rounds looking after patients with multiple complications. I find satisfaction when I can explain a diagnosis in simple words, because many patient feel lost in medical terms. My practice is grounded in evidence based guidelines but I also value practical judgement in fast paced settings. Whether it is prescribing right medicine, guiding lifestyle changes, or stabilising a critical patient, I keep my approach patient-centered and realistic. |
Achievements: | I am most confident when it comes to diagnosis and treatment, that’s where I feel my strenght really lies. Over time I developed a sharp eye for picking up subtle clinical signs, and connecting them with patient history to reach a correct provisional diagonsis. Many times it’s about acting quick, other times about slowing down to listen properly. Treatment for me is not just prescribing medicines, but tailoring it to patient’s needs, balancing safety and efectiveness while keeping long term outcomes in mind. |
I am working in medicine from last 10 years, and in that time I got to see and learn from many different kind of patients and clinical situations. Some days were about routine opd cases, fevers, diabetes follow up, other days meant handling tough emergencies where every second matterd. Over this period I grew more confident in making clinical judgement, choosing right investigations, and explaining things in a way that patient and family could actually understand without too much medical jargon. My focus is always on giving treatment that is both evidence based and also practical for daily life. I try not to look at disease in isolation but at the whole body and mind together, cause often small details in lifestyle or stress pattern make a big difference in recovery. In hospital settings I managed both inpatient and outpatient care, coordinated with nursing staff, and took part in ward rounds where teamwork mattered more than individual effort. Across 10 yrs of work I also made a point to keep learning newer protocols, whether in management of hypertension, respiratory infections, or acute cardiac complaints. And yes mistakes were there too—early in career I was slower in procedures like IV cannula or suturing, but I learnt by doing, by watching seniors and then practicing until it came natural. Over time I handled more complicated cases, sometimes multiple co-morbidities in one patient, and realised that patience and listening carefully are as important as prescribing medicine. I continue to refine my approach, balancing between clinical efficiency and compassionate care. For me, the real achievement is not only in diagnosis but in seeing a patient return home safer and more reassured. Even now after a decade, I still find myself learning something new from every case, every interaction. That keeps me grounded and motivated to serve better each day.