Dr. Tanu Changotra
Experience: | 5 years |
Education: | Oah State Medical College |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am currently persuing my MD in Anaesthesia and now in the final year of training, most of my focus is on perioperative care, critical care medicine and pain managment. Anaesthesia is not only about sedating a patient, it is about keeping every vital parameter safe during surgeries and also supporting recovery after. Day to day I work in operation theaters, ICUs and emergency setups where I handle airway managment, ventilator support and monitoring of high risk patients.
I also spend time in pre-op assessment, deciding safest techniques for patients with co-morbidities like diabetes, hypertension or cardiac issues. Some cases are routine but many need quick adaptions especially in trauma, obstetric or pediatric surgeries. Pain control is another big part of my training, because a good recovery depends on how comfortable the patient feels after procedure.
Right now my specialisation is shaping around combining evidence-based guidelines with practical skills, making sure patients are treated with both safety and empathy. |
Achievements: | I am proud to say my hands on clinical skills grew strong during my residency where I was recognised as best resident in ICU setup, managing critcal cases under high pressure enviroments. I also got the chance to represent my college at national level in the field of Regional Anaesthesia, which gave me exposure to advanced techniques and peer learning. These experinces shaped my confidence in both patient care and in working as part of a larger medical team. |
I am Dr Sri Ram and my journey in medicine started when I did my MBBS from Osh state medical university, I finished that in 2020. Right now I am in the final year of my MD Anaesthesia at Lala Lajpat Rai medical college, Meerut, where day to day I get to deal with the challenges of critical care, pain managment and perioperative support. Anaesthesia is not only about giving drugs or putting patient to sleep, it is about patient safety, anticipation of risk, quick decision making when things turn suddenly, and at the same time being calm enough to reassure families who are often worried. During my training I worked across emergency, operation theaters, ICU and pain clinics. Managing airway, handling ventilators, monitoring vitals minute to minute—these are skills that require constant focus and I keep learning new nuances every case. Some cases are straight forward but some demand fast adaption, and I realised that team communication makes a big diffrence. In ortho cases, in general surgery, in pediatric or obstetric operations, each situation needs different preparation. Sometimes the most important part is before surgery itself, when we do pre-op assesments, checking co-morbidities like diabetes, hypertension, cardiac issues, and deciding safest anaesthesia plan. I also take strong interest in post-operative recovery and pain control, because a good surgery outcome is not just about operation success but how comfortably the patient recovers. Working in critical care has exposed me to managing life threatening situations, cardiac arrest, trauma, shock and sepsis, and while those are intense moments they also teach humility, because not everything is predictable. Right now as I move towards completion of MD, I feel my focus is becoming sharper on combining evidence based practice with practical bedside skills. I try to balance technical expertise with empathy, because at the end of the day every patient is more than their disease.