Dr. Kajal Verma
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | SGT University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on women's health n child care—feels like that’s where I naturally fit. I handle all kinds of gynec problems—irregular periods, hormonal ups-n-downs, PCOD cases, even anxiety that comes along with reproductive issues. Infertility is one area where I pay extra attention. It’s tough, emotionally n physically, and many times the medical part is just one layer of it, you knw?
My approach is kinda rooted in balance—like, I don’t rush to just fix symptoms with a pill. I like to sit with a case, listen properly, understand what’s behind the issue. It cud be diet, lifestyle, stress—or everything tangled together. I mix evidence-based treatment with supportive counselling, and when needed, long-term medical therapy. Every patient gets a plan that feels like theirs. Not something copied or rushed!!
I also deal with pediatric care, especially those early stages when parents have more questions than answers. Sometimes its small things like nutrition worries or growth doubts, but they matter big time.
At the core of my work—whether its period problems or parenting stress—I try to keep things real, and supportive. Not just curing, but kinda guiding. |
Achievements: | I am running my own clinic—Krishna Health Clinic—in Chakkarpur, Gurugram and honestly that itself feel like a big thing sometimes. It’s where I get to do what I love daily—working with women and kids, handling everything from PCOD to basic newborn issues. The space kinda reflect my way of thinking... calm, safe, not rushed. Each case get my full focus, whether it’s an irregular cycle or a worried mom asking if a rash is serious. Managing both gynecology and pediatric care here, under one roof, feels meaningful. |
I am someone who kinda grew into clinical medicine one step at a time—not too flashy but very real. Started out as RMO at Park Hospital in Panipat around June 2022 till June 2023. That year taught me a lot. I was literally all over—handling patient care, shifting across depts, learning the rhythm of emergency cases, all while picking up things you won’t find in books. Decision-making under pressure, quick diagnostics, and that instinct for knowing when to dig deeper... that stuff just sticks with you. After that, I moved to Gurugram and joined Lord Krishna Hospital as an OPD Consultant from July 2023 till March 2025. This role felt more settled, but also more personal in a way—talking to patients regularly, learning their history, planning long-term care. A lot of my time went into treating chronic stuff, but also giving time to prevention and lifestyle guidance, which honestly, is where I think medicine actually starts working. I kinda realized during this time that clear communication is underrated—we assume people get what we say, but mostly they don’t unless we slow down n listen properly. I try to build that with every case now, even if there’s not always time. I don’t mind saying I’m still learning, actually I prefer it that way. There's always something new showing up, some case you didn’t expect, and that keeps things real. Whether it's an acute thing or long-term illness, I try balancing evidence-based clinical care with real, kind-of-honest human interaction. Just treating symptoms isn’t enough anymore, right? It's about trust, follow-up, and making patients feel they’re not just in a queue waiting for the next tablet.