Dr. Yuvraj Rathore
Experience: | 6 years |
Education: | International Higher School of Medicine |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am a doctor with my main focus in general surgery and primary healthcare—kind of the two sides of medicine I connect most with. During my 3 years as a Junior Resident in the Department of Surgery at Government Medical College, Dungarpur, I got deep into surgical OPD work—seeing all kinds of cases like hernia, gallstones, piles, fissure, fistula, thyroid swellings, and yeah, those endless soft tissue lumps that come in every day. Some days felt like non-stop suturing, wound dressings, pre-op prep, post-op rounds, repeat again!
Emergency care was a big part too—trauma, acute abdomen, injuries—everything that walks (or sometimes is carried) into casualty. I learned to stay sharp and calm, because you just can’t predict what’s coming next. I also assisted in major surgeries, trying to catch every detail the senior surgeons showed, and handled smaller ones myself—incision & drainage, debridement, minor excisions, that kinda stuff.
Later, as a Medical Officer at a CHC, I started seeing the bigger picture—managing both chronic and acute illnesses, maternal & child health, preventive care, counseling people who rarely see a hospital. It made me realize how much small interventions matter before things get serious.
My work now kinda blends both worlds—clinical precision of surgery and the continuous care of community medicine. I like to keep things practical, explain clearly, and make sure patients get treatment that’s right for them, not just fast. Sometimes my typing looks messy (haha, like this sentnce maybe), but I guess that’s just part of being human behind the white coat. |
Achievements: | I am someone who’s learned more from patients than from any textbook honestly. Completing 3 years of Junior Residency in Surgery at Govt Medical College, Dungarpur taught me how to handle real cases—not just study them. I managed surgical OPD, assisted in operations, and handled those 2am emergencies that test everything you know. Later, as a Medical Officer at a CHC, I worked with rural families, doing checkups, emergency care, awareness camps...sometimes all in one day! I got appreciated (kinda unexpected tbh) for keeping patient care consistent, even under pressure. I also took part in public health drives and community programs, which showed me how preventive care matters way more than we sometimes think. It wasn’t always perfect—long days, missed meals, endless paperwork haha—but I guess that’s what shaped my work today. |
I am Dr. Yuvraj Rathore, a medical professional with a bit more than 4 years of clinical experiance. Sometimes it feels like much longer honestly — the kind of learning that only comes from working long nights, emergencies, and quiet OPD mornings where you actually talk to patients, not just treat them. I spent 3 years as a Junior Resident in the Department of Surgery at Government Medical College, Dungarpur. Those were intense days — assisting in surgeries, managing pre and post-op cases, handling inpatient care, and running through emergency cases where every decision mattered (and had to be fast). I learned not just the techniques but how to stay calm when things got messy. Surgical OPD became like a second home — dressing wounds, following up post-surgery patients, and sometimes just listening to someone who was scared about a diagnosis. After that, I worked for a year as a Medical Officer at a Community Health Centre (CHC). It was a very diffirent pace — more about continuity of care than crisis response. I provided primary healthcare, managed acute & chronic illnesses, and worked on preventive and promotive health services for rural families. You don’t realize how much small interventions matter till you see a diabetic patient come back stable after months. Medicine for me isn’t only about procedures or prescriptions — it’s about attention, patience, and being honest with the person in front of you. I like to balance clinical precision with empathy, and maybe that’s why I never really rush consultations, even when the line outside is long. Right now I’m focused on deepening my surgical knowledge while keeping my general practice roots strong. Every patient still teaches me something new — some days it’s about pathology, other days it’s about humanity. Maybe that’s why I still feel curious every single day I walk into the ward or clinic.