Dr. Aish jain (PT)
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University Of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor Of Physiotherapy |
Area of specialization: | I am working with years of experiance across different areas of physiotherapy and rehab, and honestly the range is quite wide. I deal with orthopedic cases, from fractures and joint issues to long term arthritis care. Pain management is also a big part of what I do, sometimes its acute post injury and sometimes it’s chronic where patient need more time n support. Neuro cases like stroke or spinal cord problems taught me how much patience therapy demands. I also spend good amount of time with geriatric patients, helping them regain mobility and independence in daily tasks. Post surgical rehabilitation is something I follow closely, because getting back movement after surgery makes a huge difference in recovery. Pediatric work also keeps me on my toes, since kids need a different kind of approach, more playful and gentle. In between I handle obesity management, designing plans that blend physical activity with lifestyle changes. For me it’s always about long term results not just quick fixes, making sure patient leave with confidence in their own progress. |
Achievements: | I am into rehabilitation physiotharapy and over time I really saw how much it changes lives, not just on paper but in daily movements. I count this as my main achivement, building care plans that help patients recover after surgeries, injuries or chronic condtions. Sometimes its slow and sometimes faster than expected, but the goal is always same – bring back mobility and function. For me each succesful rehab case feels like a milestone in my practice, even small step matters. |
I am working from last 2 years as a doctor and honestly these years taught me more than any textbook ever could. In this time I had chance to deal with wide variety of cases, some very routine and some really unexpected that needed quick decisions. My work has been across opd care, emergency setups and in patient rounds too, so each day feels a bit different. I try to keep focus not just on treating the illness but also making sure patient and family actualy understand what is going on, what meds are for, what follow up they need. I know sometimes language or medical terms confuse people, so I break it down simple, maybe repeat again if required. In these 2 yrs I realised that being efficient is good but being patient and listening is equally imp.. sometimes more. I also got exposur to working with seniors from different departments and that helped me learn where to refer, when to seek second opinion and how to balance confidence with caution. I look at medicine as not just curing a disease but guiding lifestyle, preventing recurrence and helping people trust in the process of healing. Mistakes and doubts are natural in early years but I take them as part of learning curve, always improving. My goal is to keep refining my clinical skills while staying approachable and compassionate because in the end people remember not just the treatment but how they were treated.