Patient Experience
I'd been to a couple of doctors about this constant fatigue and stomach pain. Everyone said it was stress. Dr. Mukherjee was different. He actually listened, asked about things no one else did, and ordered some specific tests. Turns out it was a tricky autoimmune thing. He sat with me and my wife, drew a diagram on a notepad to explain it all, and didn't rush us. I'm on treatment now and finally feeling like myself. He figured out what others missed.
Had to get a cyst removed from my back. Honestly, I was nervous at first, but Dr. Mukherjee made it sound so straightforward. The day of, the procedure itself was quick, and he talked me through the whole thing. The parking at Apollo was a nightmare that morning, but once I got in, everything was efficient. Follow-up was a breeze. Sometimes simple things done right are what you need.
My dad was admitted at Apollo, and the whole environment can feel overwhelming. What stood out was how Dr. Mukherjee's team worked together. The nurses were clearly on the same page as him, and the ward staff were patient with our endless questions. The doctor himself was direct but kind, and you could tell the coordination was good. It made a stressful time a bit easier to handle.
Look, I don't like hospitals. Dr. Mukherjee gets that. He doesn't put on a big act; he's just calm and present. When he came in, he'd sit down, not hover by the door. He remembered small things I'd mentioned about my work. It felt less like a transaction and more like someone was actually looking after me. That kind of attention matters when you're not feeling well.