Dr. Sharukh Khan
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Tapovana Ayurvedic Medical College and Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am usually knee-deep in patient files and test results but tbh what really drives me is making sure no one walks away confused or unheard. I mainly work in clinical diagnostics n treatment planning—like figuring out what’s actually going on behind the symptoms. Sometimes it’s obvious, othertimes you dig a little, listen harder, ask again.
I do a lot of full patient assessments—head to toe if needed—and I like piecing all the bits together, even if they look random at first. My plans always change depending on the person, not just their lab numbers or file summary. I mean, two ppl with same diagnosis might need vry diff approach depending on lifestyle, support, even mental state.
Teamwork’s also kinda a big part of what I do. I like collaborating with specialists, nurses, whoever’s involved. I feel like when that communication flows well, patient care gets wayyy better. Fast-paced setups don’t bother me—I actually like the challenge of shifting gears quick and keeping things smooth even under pressure.
I update my clinical skills regular...like, I actually enjoy it lol. Evidence-based protocols are cool, but I also belive in reading ppl. Adapting. Making care not just efficient but human too. |
Achievements: | I am kinda wired for multitasking tbh—like, one part of me’s focused on vitals and emergency response stuff while the other half’s keeping patient comfort in check. I’ve built decent clinical skills around diagnosis and treatment planning, nothing flashy just solid and practiced. Also handle medical records without messin' up details which, ya know, matters more than ppl think.
I make sure things run smooth at clinic—stock checks, quick cleanups, patient queue—whatever’s needed. Communication’s a big one too, like just talking clearly to ppl can change how they respond to care. I stick to privacy rules, keep files tidy (well, mostly), and really try to make health feel less scary and more manageable for folks walking in with a thousand doubts |
I am someone who honestly just believes in showing up and doing the work—day after day, shift after shift, whether it’s ward rounds or ICU monitoring or health camp in some noisy schoolyard. I focus a lot on diagnosis accuracy and patient clarity—what’s going on, why it might be happening, and what we can actually do about it. Like, no vague talk... either we manage it or we refer it, no ego in that. Most of my work till now has been around OPD, IPD, and ICU settings—I’ve handled ABG sampling, Ryle’s tube insertion, plus all the “small” things ppl skip over like proper charting and follow-ups that honestly build the backbone of good care. Interviewing patients, understanding the full symptom picture, explaining tests without jargon—that stuff matters too. I routinely interpret lab tests, and I do try to rely on evidence-based plans (tho yeah—sometimes experience does beat textbook logic). Preventive stuff is part of my workflow too. I’ve worked on community drives—like child immunizations and basic public health awareness things—and somewhere along the line I realized clinical care’s just one part. Empowering the patient, giving them enough clarity to want to follow through... that’s another skill altogether. I keep things ethical. Confidential. But also warm... like, just human. I guess what I’m trying to say is: I work hard to connect the dots. Between the lab values and the face in front of me. Between clinical guidelines and what a patient’s life actually allows. And maybe that’s where my real strength lies—bridging the gap between textbook medicine and real-world health.