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Akash Kumar
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Akash Kumar

Akash Kumar
GMC, District Hospital
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
International School of Medicine
Academic degree:
MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery)
Area of specialization:
I am a doctor who lean mostly toward internal medicine, kinda drawn to the way adult health issues connect under the surface. I deal a lot with diabetes, high BP, those recurring respiratory infectons and the gut troubles that sneak up on people when lifestyle gets out of balance. Sometimes I catch myself going too deep into the details, then I back up and remind myself to look at the whole person, not just the lab numbers or some guideline I read yesterday. I try to understand how someone’s daily routine actually works—what they eat, how they sleep, what stress keeps poking at them—because treatment that ignores all that usually dont hold. My style is a mix of clinical evidence and real-world practicality, even if my wording slips or a comma goes missng here n there!! I spend time on prevention too, trying to explain what’s going on inside the body in plain language, though I worry I ramble sometimes. What matters is making care fit the life a person already has, not forcing them into something unrealistic.
Achievements:
I am a doctor who got my medical degree in 2024, and yeah that felt like a real milestone even if I dont always say it right. I kinda grew alongside other things too—writing that slows my head down, and sports that keeps me steady, sharper than I expect some days. Those habits helped me stay focused on patient care, though my thoughts still jumble or a comma go missing here n tehre!!

I am a doctor who finished my medical degree in 2024, but honestly my real start in healthcare kinda goes back to 2019 when I first got pulled into day-to-day clinical work. I moved through ENT, pediatrics, dermatology, ophthalmology, general medicine and emergency care—sometimes bouncing between them faster than I expected. That mix gave me a pretty wide view of how different systems in the body act up in totally different ways, and I still catch myself thinking about a case from one department while working in another, which sounds confusing but somehow helps me connect things better. During my year at the District Government Hospital in the middle of the COVID mess (no other word fits), I was doing everything from rapid triage to dealing with patients who needed urgent respiratory support. Those days were long and somtimes a bit chaotic; protocols kept changing, supplies came and went, and we had to adjust on the fly. But that year grounded me in real-world medicine more than any lecture ever could. I learned how to read a situation fast, when to slow down even if everyone is rushing, and how to stay focused even when my mind felt like it was slipping off track. I try to bring that same practical, patient-first mindset into my clinical practice now. Whether I am looking at a kid with a stubborn cough or checking an older patient’s chronic issues, I pay attention to the small clues—skin changes, airway patterns, vision complaints, odd ENT symptoms—because they often lead to what’s really going on. My approach is not fancy; I just like to keep things clear, evidence-based, and kinda down to earth, even if my wording gets a bit messy sometimes or I miss a comma here or tehre. I suppose what matters most is that every part of my early training shaped how I care for people today. And even if I still feel like I am figuring out the “perfect” way to explain things, I stay committed to giving patients practical guidance they can actually use, backed by the clinical exposure I have lived through rather than just read about.