Dr. Sreeharsha Palaparthi
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | The Apollo Institute of Medical Sciences and Research |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am working mainly in general medicine, where I see patients with wide range of health conditions every day. Most people come with common issues like fevers, cough, throat infection, body pain, headaches, stomach upsets, but many times it is also diabetes, hypertension or long term problems that need careful follow up. I also handle acute cases such as injuries, small burns, wound management, and sudden spikes of pain where quick relief is important before further treatment.
I try to balance routine checkups with urgent care, sometimes moving from managing a chronic diabetic patient to treating a child with high fever in the same hour. It makes the work unpredictable but keeps you sharp. Over time I gained more confidence in handling infections, deciding when antibiotics are really needed and when simple measures can help. In pain management too I look at not just medicines but lifestyle, posture, and stress which affect recovery more than people realise.
My focus is always on making treatment practical and safe, no matter if it is hypertension control, blood sugar regulation or injury care. I know patients look for trust and clear explanation more than complex medical words, so I keep my advice simple and direct. For me the goal is not only to treat illness but also to guide patients into better long term health. |
Achievements: | I am grateful that my work in medical field was recognised early, I scored distinction in ophthalmology and pediatrics during my studies which gave me more clarity on my intrest in patient care. I also recieved a medal in ophthalmology for my performance, something that still keep me motivated when I deal with eye cases. Another key achievemnt was the medal I got for my ICMR STS project, where I had to manage research work along with clinical rotations. These milestones shaped my confidence. |
I am dr who started this path with mbbs, worked really hard through the years and managed to complete it succesfully. That gave me not just the degree but also a strong base in healthcare, clinical skills and patient care. My early role as a Casualty medical officer at govt medical college madanapalle was quite intense, with emergency cases coming day and night, where I had to quickly learn how to think fast and act with confidence. Those days shaped much of how I see medicine even now, every patient is different and needs careful thought, even when time is short. Right now I work as a medical officer/civil assistant surgeon under the national health mission, which is a different kind of challenge because it connects you with community level healthcare. You deal with not only acute cases but also long term health management, preventive medicine, counseling families, and finding ways to balance limited resources with maximum benefit for patients. It is not always easy but it feels meaningful when small efforts make bigger change in public health. Along with my work I am pursuing Fellowship in critical care and emergency medicine. I wanted to focus here because emergency and ICU settings really demand both sharp clinical knowledge and steady nerves. Critical care exposes you to ventilators, advanced monitoring, resusctation protocols, polytrauma and sepsis management. Sometimes you get stuck between protocols and real life urgency, and that’s when experience matter more than any textbook. I am still learning daily, but already the fellowship is sharpening my approach to emergencies. I try to carry both clinical precision and humane side of medicine together. I remind myself that every diagnosis is not just a case but a person who is scared or hopeful. My work is not about fancy titles, its more about standing steady in chaos, providing right care and continuing to grow with every patient I meet.