Dr. Diivya (PT)
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Gurugram University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor Of Physiotherapy |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly doing ICU duty these days — and yeah, it's intense, in every sense. The kind of care needed there is minute-to-minute. You don’t really get a break to zone out or second-guess. I handle critical patients post-surgery, trauma, stroke — all sorts. Working in that high-pressure setup kinda wires you differently... you start noticing small things faster, and thinking two-three steps ahead by reflex.
Apart from ICU, I’ve been closely involved in post-op rehabilitation — especially those tricky transition days right after surgery. Helping patients stabilize, regain mobility, manage pain, prevent infections — that whole recovery arc. It’s not glam work, but it’s super necessary. You realise how vulnerable bodies can get, and how fragile recovery sometimes feels.
Also seen a lot of stroke cases — acute and chronic both. The recovery process can be really slow, frustrating for families and patients both. I try to focus on basic neuro support, close monitoring, speech, mobility, that sorta thing. I coordinate with physio teams and also track vitals like hawk because stroke patients? they can swing either way real quick.
Honestly, this kind of work teaches patience and urgency at the same time. I like that balance, even if it's a bit messy. |
Achievements: | I am trained in HCS cardiac rehab, which kinda opened up a whole new angle for me in patient recovery. Working with post-cardiac event cases taught me how rehab isn’t just about walking again or hitting some number on a treadmill. It’s about building back trust in the body after it's failed you once. Through structured exercise, monitoring vitals, and slow lifestyle tweaking — I help patients regain strength, both physical n mental. Honestly, small wins here feel huge. |
I am currently working with Aarvy Healthcare in Sector 90 and have been here for about 1.5 years now — doesn’t sound like a lot, but honestly it’s been full of learning curves, challenges, and weirdly satisfying moments too. This place gave me the kind of real-time exposure no textbook really preps you for. From managing high patient flow days to helping families understand what’s *actually* going on with their loved ones — it’s made me sharper, faster and also way more patient. My daily work involves close coordination with seniors, nurses, and support staff — figuring out diagnostics, doing rounds, following up lab trends, adjusting meds and yeah sometimes even chasing reports that didn’t upload right! I’ve been involved in OPD and IPD settings both, and honestly that mix keeps you grounded. You see the full cycle — from first consult to discharge (or in some cases, longer stays that stay with you emotionally for a while.) It’s not just about giving the right drug or ordering one more scan. Sometimes it’s sitting with someone who’s scared out of their mind and just breaking down their report in plain language. Aarvy’s setup allowed me to do that more — because you’re not just another number here. I’ve worked on a mix of cases — fever panels to post-op care, pregnancy monitoring to cancer symptom support — which helped me slowly find my rhythm. Still figuring a lot out, tbh. But I know one thing: I show up, I care, and I don’t clock out mentally the minute my shift ends. That part matters. You can’t fake that. This phase of work has been real, messy, humbling and valuable — all at once.