Dr. Kowsik
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | AMCRC, Mauritius |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working across general medicine, orthopedics and emergency medicine, each one demanding different set of skills but all linked in patient care. In general medicine I deal with wide range of conditions like diabetes, hypertension, infections, gastric and systemic illness, trying to look at whole patient not just isolated symptom. Orthopedic side gave me exposure to fracture care, trauma, joint issues, rehabilitation plans. And in emergency I handle acute cases, accident injuries, cardiac or respiratory collapse, situations where every minute counts. I try to keep balance between quick decisive action and clear explanation to patients or family even in stressfull settings. My focus is always on evidence based practice with humane approach, whether its long term management or immediate life support. These 3 areas together shaped my clinical outlook, helping me stay flexible yet thorough in diagnosis and treatment. |
Achievements: | I am proud to share that in 2024 I was named Best young doctor of the year and also recognized as Outstanding young archiver in medicine. These awards mean more than just titles for me, they show the trust of patients and peers and remind me to keep working harder. I dont see them as end point but more like encouragement to keep growing in clinical skills, research and patient care, and to serve better every day. |
I am working in medicine with about 1.4 year of clinical practice in general medicine and orthopedics, and more recently 1 month as consultant in critical care medicine. The transition from ward based medicine into critical care taught me a lot about speed, focus and handling situations where minutes really matter. In general medicine I dealt with common but important issues like diabetes, hypertension, infections, gastric and joint disorders, while in orthopedics I managed trauma cases, fractures, joint pain, rehab guidance. These gave me a strong base in both acute and chronic case management. Now in critical care I am facing severe emergencies, ventilator management, sepsis protocols, multi-organ failure and continuous monitoring, which sharpen both technical skills and decision making. I try to balance clinical accuracy with humane touch, explaining to families what is happening even in tense moments, cause they deserve clarity. I believe no patient is just a disease, they are people with background, family and fears, and my role is to treat them keeping all of that in mind. My interest remain broad—internal medicine, orthopedics, and critical care overlap in many ways, and I feel each part of my training complement the other. I know my journey is still early but every day I am learning, correcting, trying to make the care safer and more effective. For me, growth in medicine is continuous and shaped by each patient I meet.