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Dr. Sunil H Bhagat
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Dr. Sunil H Bhagat

Dr. Sunil H Bhagat
Seven hills
Doctor information
Experience:
4 years
Education:
Maharashtra University of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly dealing with those day-to-day issues that kinda get overlooked—like yeah, fever, cold, sprains, wounds, but trust me, they’re not always “just minor” when ppl come in real discomfort. I manage a bunch of acute illnesses—respiratory infections, stomach bugs, cuts, small fractures (or suspected ones), all the common things you think you know till they show up slightly different. I’m used to working with diagnostic tools too—reading blood reports, imaging results etc.—not just collecting them but actually *using* them to get a clearer picture and not miss out on smth crucial. Sometimes patients come thinking it's just a “regular cough” but then it’s something more layered, and that’s when I go deep into history-taking, looking at habits, background, small signs they maybe ignored. It’s fast-paced work but I like that—it keeps me sharp and kinda forces me to think both clearly and quickly. I try hard not to rush anyone though, like yeah, being efficient but not robotic about it. My whole thing is to stay practical but warm—listen carefully, ask the right stuff, then explain in a way ppl get it. I believe care should feel like someone actually noticed you, not just checked you off a list. And even if it's a simple case of tonsillitis or ankle twist, I wanna make sure they leave feeling better *and* understood.
Achievements:
I am certified in Basic Life Support (BLS) and yeah, that’s kinda become one of those skills I rely on when stuff gets intense. It’s not just about knowing the steps—it's like you train your hands n brain to move before panic sets in. I’ve used those skills during real emergency calls, like cardiac arrests or when someone's suddenly can't breathe. The BLS training gave me the base to stay calm, act fast n do what matters when every sec literally counts, esp when no second chances.

I am someone who kinda learned the real stuff beyond books while working in wards n clinics—like not just theory but how ppl actually show up sick, scared, confused... and how to handle that in real time. I’ve worked with cases of diabetes, hypertension, respiratory diseases—basic but messy sometimes. My routine involved doing full health checkups, spotting patterns, diagnosing right (well, tried best to), and creating treatment plans that weren’t just copies of protocols but built around *that* person’s life. Emergency scenes taught me what no class ever could—like during cardiac arrests or seizures, when every second is... just different. You react or you lose time. It kinda forced me to be alert but not panic-y. I also did my share of ward rounds, attended seminars (lots actually), and even joined a bunch of clinical workshops where small tips from seniors mattered more than big lectures. One thing I always pay attention to is how to explain things to ppl—patients don’t want jargon, they want real talk. That’s where I try to stay grounded, even when the disease is complex. I know enough about basic surgical procedures too, not everything hands-on, but I get the flow of it. My strength, I’d say, is reading the whole picture—not just numbers on a chart. I look for the root pattern, see where their lifestyle is poking the imbalance, and then plan accordingly. I’m big on learning—every case has smth new to teach and I kinda like being in that space where you’re always sharpening your tools, while also staying human.