Dr. Vivek Nagada
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | International School of Medicine, Bishkek |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am an MBBS doctor still shaping my own path in clinical practice, kind of learning how all the pieces fit together even when they don’t line up neatly. My main focus is broad medical care — diagnosing common conditions, managing acute issues, doing the day-to-day clinical assesments that keep things moving. Sometimes I double check a simple step or miss a letter while typing, but that doesn’t change how I try to look at every case with a bit of depth, not just rushing thru.
I am trained across the core areas of general medicine, and I use that grounding to approach symptoms carefully… sometimes I pause longer than needed, wondering if a tiny detail matters more than I think. Clinical reasoning, patient evaluation, and basic procedural work all fall under my routine, even though the flow can feel messy on busier days!! I try to keep communication clear with patients, even when my mind jumps ahead or a comma sort of disappears from where it should be.
I am consistently building stronger judgment, relying on evidence-based practice but still staying open to learning from each small, real-world moment. This MBBS background lets me handle a wide mix of medical concerns, and even if my notes get a bit untidy or a word comes out wrng, the goal stays the same — safe, steady, attentive care. |
Achievements: | I am holding my MBBS degree and sometimes I still look at it like wow, that part actually happened. Completing my internship at Civil Kheda was another big step, a bit chaotic too, but it gave me hands-on clinical expereince that keeps shaping how I work now. I learned to manage routine cases, sudden emergencies, and the tiny details I almost miss while rushing. These achievements aren’t flashy or anything, but they feel solid, real,, and kind of push me forward every day. |
I am currently doing my internship at Civil Kheda, still figuring some things out day by day, but I like how the clinical exposure keeps pushing me. Earlier I did my internship at an international school of medicine, and that mix of environments kinda shaped how I look at patient care now… maybe in ways I didn’t fully expect. Sometimes I catch myself comparing procedures or the way we handle cases, and then I have to remind myself that every setting has its own rhythm, its own small challanges. I am working across general medicine duties, seeing routine OPD cases and the more unpredictable stuff that walks in, trying to apply proper clinical reasoning even when my mind is running a bit too fast. I focus a lot on careful patient assessment and evidence-based decision making, though I admit I still type thngs wrong on the chart or double-check a diagnosis maybe one too many times. At Civil Kheda the workload can get pretty heavy, but that actually helps me learn to manage time, prioritise patient needs and stay calm even when the ward feels like its spinning a bit. I am particularly attentive to early symptom recognition and basic emergency response, because the international school of medicine internship had exposed me to a broad mix of pathologies, and now here those skills feel more grounded… like they’re actually growing roots. Sometimes I rethink a step or go back over a treatment plan becaus I want to be sure I didn’t miss some small sign hiding in the noise. I am still building my clinical confidence, but I approach each patient with respect, clear communication, and a kind of steady curiosity about their health issues. Maybe my path isn’t perfectly smooth, and sure I make tiny misstypes or skip a comma here or there, but the commitment to safe, reliable care is real and constant.