Dr. Vyakhya
Experience: | |
Education: | NIMS Medical College and Hospital. |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am working in pediatrics and most of my focus is around opd, ipd, as well as handling critical care in NICU and PICU setups. Dealing with kids means every case is different, no matter if its a routine fever or a complicated neonatal condition, you have to stay alert. I trained myself in emergency and resusciation protocols too, courses like PAL’s, ATLS, and NRP which really change the way you act under pressure. Sometimes you don’t even get time to think, you just follow the right step and that can make all the diffrence.
Managing outpatient care is about listening to parents properly, explaining in simple words what’s going on, and making sure they don’t walk away confused. In the inpatient side, I deal with more acute illnesses, long stays, and that requires patience along with skill. NICU is another level of intensity, those tiny babies fighting to survive teach you how fragile and yet how strong life can be.
What I like in this field is the mix, some days are about preventive advice like nutrition and vaccinations, other days its about ventilators and critical care. The range is wide but that keeps me grounded. Each case, even the smaller ones, remind me that trust of the family is as important as the treatment plan. |
Achievements: | I am glad to say that I have done paper presentations, posters and also managed to get one publication which felt like a big step for me. Working on these gave me chance to explore subjects more deeply and also taught me how much effort goes behind even a single study. Poster sessions were kind of exciting too, you get quick feedback, sometimes critics but that helps you improve. The publication made me more confident that my work can contribute, even if small, to wider medical knowledge. |
I am currently working as a Senior Resident in GTB Hospital, New Delhi, and honestly it’s been both demanding and grounding in so many ways. The hospital is one of the busiest setups you can think of, and being in the middle of that chaos every day means handling a crazy wide range of cases. From routine opd consultations that sound simple but turn out tricky, to emergency admissions where seconds really matter, I get exposed to everything. Some days are long, some are just longer, but they all keep teaching me something new. Working across departments here has sharpened my clinical judgement a lot more than I even expected. It’s not just about prescribing meds or writing investigations, it’s about looking at the whole patient—understanding the story behind the symptoms. A single chest pain can mean a dozen different things, and you have to decide quickly which one matters most right now. That pressure is rough but also makes me more confident in my decisions. I try to hold onto a simple approach: listen properly, check carefully, don’t rush unless you need to. Patients often walk in stressed or confused, and if you don’t take that extra min to explain, they walk out with more doubts than before. I’ve learnt that even in the busiest wards, communication can be as important as the treatment plan itself. Sometimes I catch myself overthinking—like whether I missed a detail or could have explained something better. But maybe that’s part of growing. The exposure here also keeps reminding me why evidence-based practice matters. Every prescription, every referral, every discharge summary, it all adds up to long term outcomes for patients. Being at GTB is less about titles and more about responsibility. I see myself not just treating, but learning continuously from colleagues, seniors, and even patients. And while the workload never really slows, it has shaped me into someone more disciplined and focused, not only as a doctor but as a person.