Dr. Dhwani Vyas
A ten-year-old child approached our former president of India, Dr. ABDUL KALAM, for his autograph, after one of his speeches with a copy of one of his books. What is your goal, he asked of her. She responded without hesitation, “I want to live in a developed India.” She and the many millions of Indians who share her goals are the subjects of this book. This was said in Dr. A.P. J. Abdul Kalam’s book, “India 2020: A Vision for the New Millennium,” co-written with Y.S. Rajan. This hope is expressed in the Preface of the book. Such examples are sufficient to stimulate our thinking, and we all have a responsibility (including all the recipients of the award) to change “developing India” into “developed India,”
So have you ever thought about medical fields besides MBBS and BDS? She wants to say that physiotherapy is one of the promising professions to take after class 12 if you wish to pursue a medical career. This is one of the most well-liked medical programs outside of MBBS and BDS.
Physical activity is used in physiotherapy, which is thought to be a centuries-old science. A physiotherapist is referred to as a doctor in India by adding the prefix “Dr.” this self-sufficient medical practice aims to increase a patient’s ability to move the damaged body part while also reducing pain and restoring function. It also assists patients with illnesses and injuries in controlling severe pain and improving their quality of life. They can assess the severity of injuries using their knowledge of physiotherapy and develop a treatment plan that speeds up patients’ recovery, and unwell patients recovering from surgery or living with long-term illnesses benefit from the assistance of these healthcare experts.
Dhawani Vyas works in the physiotherapy profession, and the 60th annual conference was conducted at Ahmedabad and for which our Honourable Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi addressed the scope and importance of physiotherapy. As a young doctor, she is glad to be a part of this field because physiotherapy is the only profession that can treat patients without using drugs or surgery. She has already obtained a master’s degree in physiotherapy and has decided to approach her career with particular preferences for its ethical, scientific, and educational values. She already owns a physiotherapy clinic in Vadodara and has seen moderate cases in a very short time; now, she wants to get involved in further research work and workshops for the community, particularly for the young generation of physiotherapists. As far as she can do so, she wants to treat the conditions, but she also wants to stop it before it starts since, as we often say, prevention is better than cure.
Last but not least, not only her but every award winner must put their best foot forward so that others can do the same and we can truly achieve the dream of a developed India and continue to maintain a huge name or big place for our Country.