Dr. Harshini
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Vivekanandha Dental College for Women |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Dental Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am working as a dentist and my specialization cover diagnosis, treatment planning and full range of restorative procedures. Most of the time I start with dental X-rays and clinical exam to identify caries, gum issues or structural defects. From there I prepare detailed plans that balance what is clinically required with what the patient can actually manage in daily life.
I handle restorative work like fillings, crowns, bridges (fpd) and tooth preparation. Deep caries management is a big part of my practice too, where the goal is always to save the tooth structure and avoid unnecessary extraction. Scaling and cleaning are also important because prevention is easier than complicated treatment later, but many patients come only after pain start, and then we work step by step to fix it.
For me dentistry is not only about drilling or placing a filling, it’s about listening to patient complaints, looking at X-rays carefully and building trust that the procedure will help. Whether it’s a simple restoration or a complex bridge, I focus on making sure the treatment is safe, effective and comfortable as possible. |
Achievements: | I am proud that I attended more than 20 CDE programmes over last few years, and each one added something new to my practice. These continuing dental education sessions gave me updates on clinical techniques, newer materials, endodontic protocols and also practical tips that I could apply next day in my clinic. Some were short, some stretched for days, but all remind me that dentistry is constantly evolving and we cant stop learning if we want to serve patients better!! |
I am at the very start of my career with 6 months of clinical experience, and though it may sound short, in medicine even half a year feels intense and filled with lessons. In this time I worked closely with patients across different conditions, some routine and some that needed urgent care. Each case forced me to listen better, think sharper and understand that behind every report or lab value there is a real person waiting for clarity. During these months I assisted in consultations, observed surgical procedures, managed follow ups and also learned how important simple communication can be. Many patients are more afraid of not knowing what is happening than of the treatment itself, and I realised even a small explanation can reduce that fear. That part of practice matter as much as diagnosis or prescribing medicine. I have also seen how teamwork shape outcomes. Senior doctors, nurses, support staff — everyone has a role, and learning to coordinate with them has been a big part of my growth. Sometimes the challenge was not clinical but logistical, like arranging investigations on time or ensuring follow up visits are not missed. These small details end up making a huge diference in patient recovery. Even though 6 months is early in this journey, I take it as a foundation where skills are slowly building. Every new case add something to my judgement. Some mistakes taught me more than the easy cases, and I keep reminding myself that learning in medicine never stop. My aim is to keep growing step by step, to stay consistent, and to put patient well being above everything else.