Dr. Mandeep Sharma
Experience: | 23 years |
Education: | Desh Bhagat Ayurvedic Medical College and Hospital Mandigobindgarh |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly focused on treating fistula and piles using Kshar sutra, which has been a core part of my clinical work for long time now, and I still take it very seriously. Alongside this, I handle infertility cases in both male and female patients, where the process can be slow and sometimes confusing, but careful evaluation really matters. I also treat skin diseases, hair fall, dandruff issues, and hormonal conditions like PCOD, which often overlap more then people expect.
I am involved in managing liver diseases, gastro problems, and neurological conditions such as paralysis, and these cases require steady follow up rather than rushed decisions. My approach is not rushed, I prefer to understand patterns, symptoms, and response over time, even if progress feels uneven. Some days the conditions respond well, other days need rethinking, and I stay open to that. I try to keep treatment practical, patient specific, and realistic, even when cases are complex or dont follow usual paths. |
Achievements: | No |
I am a doctor with about 22 years of experience working closely with chronic patients, and also with special children, and that long time in practice has shaped how I see medicine day to day. My work is focused on long-term care, chronic disease management, and supporting children with special needs, which is demanding and sometimes a bit heavy, but also very grounding. Over the years I have learned that treating chronic conditions is rarely straight line progress, and patients dont always fit into neat plans or textbook descriptions. I am deeply involved in ongoing care rather than quick fixes, following patients over time and adjusting treatment as their needs change, sometimes slowly, sometimes all at once. Working with special children has required patience, flexibility, and attention to small details that others might miss, and honestly I am still learning from them even after two decades. My approach is practical and calm, with a strong focus on continuity of care, symptom control, and improving daily function, not just lab numbers or reports. I am careful to listen, even when the story comes out messy or incomplete, because chronic illness rarely shows up clearly on first try. Some days the work feels straightforward, other days less clear, but I stay committed to providing consistent medical support that families can rely on. I try to balance clinical judgement with human understanding, though I get it wrong sometimes, and then I adjust. After 22 years in this field, I still believe steady care, clear communication, and realistic planning matter more then promises that sound good!!