In 1983, Shailendra took a short trip to visit his cousin in Ambernath, a small industrial town in the Thane district. He was a young doctor with a dual diploma in Pediatrics and Psychiatry from Mumbai’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, but he had no fixed map for the future. During that visit, he heard of a vacancy at the Kalyan Municipal Corporation. He applied, got the job, and stayed for ten years. What began as a casual family visit became the anchor for a forty-year career, illustrating how often the most stable medical lives in India are built on the foundation of a single, unplanned conversation.
From the Wardha Plains to the Mumbai Fringe
Shailendra’s roots were in the black soil of Wardha. Born in Ashti to a Gram Sevak, his early life followed the modest, disciplined trajectory of a government servant’s son. His schooling took him through Seloo and then to the pre-university hubs of Amravati and Akola. By the time he reached GMC Nagpur in 1973 as part of Batch D, he carried the typical Vidarbha student’s mix of academic focus and quiet ambition.
After completing his rural internship at Karanja Ghadge, he made the move that many of his contemporaries found daunting: he headed to Mumbai. While others returned to their home districts to set up practice, Shailendra immersed himself in the grueling house jobs of KEM Hospital and RN Cooper Municipal General Hospital. This period, spent navigating the high-volume wards of Medicine, Pediatrics, and Neonatology, provided a clinical baptism that the quieter primary health centers of Vidarbha could not offer.
The Municipal Anchor and the Private Pivot
The ten years Shailendra spent with the Kalyan Municipal Corporation placed him at the intersection of public service and the rapid urbanisation of the Mumbai fringe. In the mid-1980s, Kalyan was transforming from a railway junction into a sprawling residential satellite. Shailendra and his wife—a gynaecologist trained at Solapur—recognised the shifting landscape. They established a 15-bed hospital in Kalyan East, a practice that balanced his pediatric and psychiatric training with her obstetric work.
His career reflects a broader historical movement in Indian medicine: the era when a husband-and-wife duo could provide the primary healthcare infrastructure for an entire neighborhood. For decades, they were the first point of contact for sick children and complicated pregnancies, operating with an autonomy that is increasingly rare in the modern medical “ecosystem.”
The Corporate Shift and the New Skepticism
As the century turned, the ground shifted beneath the independent nursing home. Shailendra has watched the arrival of corporate multi-specialty hospitals with a mixture of pragmatism and caution. The rise of cashless insurance and the consolidation of care under single, massive roofs has changed the economics of the 15-bed clinic. “Now we have as many as four corporate hospitals in our area,” he observes. “With patients becoming more inquisitive and skeptical, we need to be very cautious when we deal with complicated pregnancies or sick children.”
This skepticism—driven by the internet and a declining social contract between doctor and patient—has led Shailendra to pivot once again. In 2013, he joined the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Program (RNTCP) at Rajiv Gandhi Medical College, Thane. He has consciously scaled back his clinical practice to focus on public health, moving from the bedside to the classroom and the community.
The Open University and the Quiet Return
Today, the nursing home that once hummed with the cries of newborns has found a second life as an educational center. Shailendra uses the premises to run a study center recognized by Yashwantrao Chavan Maharashtra Open University, offering courses in laboratory technology and patient assistance. It is a full-circle return to his roots as the son of a Gram Sevak: the doctor has become a facilitator of social mobility for others.
He continues his TB awareness programs in schools and colleges voluntarily, working within the structures of government programs he once navigated as a young municipal officer. Shailendra’s path shows that while the “king” of a private practice might find his borders shrinking due to corporate growth, the doctor who views himself as a public servant will always find a new territory to cultivate.