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Dr. Roop Narayan
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Dr. Roop Narayan

Dr. Roop Narayan
Currently I am Serve in Medial college as Assistant Proffesor And Run Owen Mulispeciality hospital in jaipur
Doctor information
Experience:
10 years
Education:
S.P. Medical College
Academic degree:
MS (Master Of Surgrey)
Area of specialization:
ChatGPT said: I am trained in General Surgery, that’s where I spend most of my time during post graduate years, handling both routine and complex surgical cases. Over the years I developed strong interest in Laparoscopic and GI surgery, the minimally invasive techniques are challanging but they give patients faster recovery and less pain, which feels worth the effort. Working in GI surgery also taught me how sensitive digestive health is, and how even small procedures can change quality of life in a big way. I also did a fellowship in Critical Care Medicine for 6 month, where I was more deeply exposed to ICU patients, ventilator care, trauma emergencies and sepsis management. Those experiences shaped the way I approach surgical patients today, cause surgery doesn’t end in the OT, it continues in the ICU and wards, monitoring every small change. Earlier, I also worked as a junior resident in General Medicine for 2 year, which gave me a broader medical base, dealing with medical emergencies, chronic illnesses and learning the overlap between medicine and surgery. This combination of surgery, critical care, and medicine help me see patients more wholistically. Sometimes it’s not only about operating but knowing when to wait, when to stabilise, and when to take that extra step. That balance is what I try to keep in my practice everyday.
Achievements:
I am involved in research work related to GI surgery and also in studies on irritable bowel syndromes, trying to understand better ways of diagnosis and treatment. My clinical focus extend to proctology, where I handle piles, fistula, and fissure cases regularly. Over time I also worked with laser surgery techniques, which are now widely used for anorectal problems and give patients faster healing. Each of these areas keep me learning everyday, nothing feel routine actually.

I am a doctor who completed my MBBS in 2015, that was the real start of my journey into medicine, and right after I began working as a general physician in different hospitals for around 2 yess. Those first years taught me alot about primary care, handling emergencies late night, and dealing with patients from very different backgrounds. Later I went on to pursue my postgraduate degree in MS Surgery from SPMC Bikaner, where I got the structured surgical training, working across OT’s, wards and OPD’s, managing both routine and complicated cases. After finishing that phase, I joined RUHS Jaipur as a Senior Resident, and that experience was intense but rewarding. Being a resident gave me chance to refine my surgical hand, but also exposed me to team work in critical cases, managing post operative patients and balancing between teaching juniors and learning from seniors at the same time. I also completed a fellowship in Critical Care Medicine for 6 month, which made me more confident in handling ICU based patients, ventilator management, sepsis, trauma and all the high-pressure situations that often decide the outcome in minutes. Since 2020 I have been running my own hospital, where I serve not only as a practicing surgeon and physician but also as the Director. Managing a hospital bring another set of challenges, from administration, staff coordination, patient satisfaction, to ensuring that quality standards are not compromised even in busy days. It’s not easy, but it gave me wider view of healthcare, beyond the operation table and consultation room. Looking back, each step shaped the way I practice now. From MBBS to surgery, from residency to critical care, from working under mentors to leading my own hospital—I try to carry forward the same commitment to patients, that every life matter and small improvements in care can make huge difference.