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Dr. Sharanya Muralidharan
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Dr. Sharanya Muralidharan

Dr. Sharanya Muralidharan
MGM Hospital Vashi And Different Hospitals Across Navi Mumbai
Doctor information
Experience:
4 years
Education:
MGM Medical College Aurangabad
Academic degree:
MD (Doctor of Medicine)
Area of specialization:
I am working as a pediatrician and my main focus is kids right from birth upto 18 yrs. Its not just about treating sickness, a big part of my work is preventive care too—like making sure growth milestones are tracked, vaccines are on time, nutrition issues are handled before they turn bigger. I also deal with day to day conditions like fevers, infections, asthma, stomach problems, but then there’s the long term side, things like managing chronic ilness or monitoring development when parents are worried something feels off. Sometimes the challenge is not only the medical side but helping parents understand whats happening and calming their anxity while explaining the plan. Pediatric care keeps shifting as children grow, an infant’s need are way diff than a teenager’s, so the approach also have to change. That’s what keeps the field so wide and never dull. My goal in all this is simple—keep the child healthy, support families through doubts and guide them with evidence based pediatric medicine, but also with empathy.
Achievements:
I have completed my post graduation in Pediatrics from Aurangabad. I hold a md degree with 7 years of experience

I am someone who’s been in this medical journey for a while now—11 years post MBBS, to be exact. Out of that, around 7.5 years went into post graduation and the work that followed, which honestly shaped a lot of how I approach patient care today. There’s a certain shift that happens when you’ve spent over a decade in medicine—you stop chasing quick fixes and start noticing patterns, digging deeper, asking diff kind of questions. My clinical exp covers a pretty broad range. I’ve dealt with routine OPD stuff, tough IPD cases, emergency walk-ins where things get chaotic real fast, and long follow-ups where progress feels slow but steady. There's something about working consistently across that whole timeline that teaches you more than textbooks ever could. Anyway, I do think that what makes the diff is not just what you *know*, but how you apply it—like picking up on small signs patients might not even realise are important or knowing when to wait and when to act. Some of that comes from years of trial/error (and yeah, mistakes you learn hard from), and some from just listening better. There's no perfect formula. Some days, it’s smooth. Other times, you're second-guessing until that last minute decision just clicks. I try to stay updated, do my reading, ask questions even now—because the day I stop doing that, I’d probably lose what makes this job meaningful. Anyway, not trying to sound preachy. Just sharing where I stand after these 11 years. Still learning. Still caring. Still here.