Raj Sharma believes that the best diagnostic tool a doctor possesses is a memory for faces. In the town of Kamptee, just outside Nagpur, Raj has spent three decades practicing a form of “continuum medicine.” She has delivered babies whose mothers she also delivered. For Raj, a patient is not a case number or a pathology; they are a chapter in a multi-generational story. In an era where corporate hospitals are built on anonymity and efficiency, Raj has built her hospital on the enduring, unquantifiable currency of trust.
The Mechanical Precision of a Town Doctor
Raj was born in Kamptee to a mechanical engineer, a background that perhaps explains her affinity for the structural logic of surgery. She moved through the local Zilla Parishad schools and Hislop College before entering GMC Nagpur in 1973. After obtaining her DGO in 1983, she spent fourteen years at the Municipal Hospital—starting when it was a modest 50-bed facility and witnessing its transformation into a major sub-district hub.
This period was the crucible of her career. In the government wards, she learned that being a gynaecologist in a small town requires you to be a counselor, a surgeon, and a social worker all at once. By the time she started her private 9-bed Mehta Hospital in 1993, she was already a known entity in every street of Kamptee.
The Family Physician Ideal
The central tension in Raj’s life is the decline of the general practitioner as the “god of the small things.” She has watched medicine move toward a model of “referral and specialty,” yet she has stubbornly remained a family physician.
Over the last three decades, I have truly been a family physician. I have delivered women whose mothers I had delivered. The trust that I enjoyed from these closely-knit patients cannot be described in words. It feels so good to be part of a family that showers so much love and affection on you.
This sentiment reflects the historical sweep described by Ramachandra Guha—the generational shift from the communal “village doctor” to the isolated “urban specialist.” Raj represents the bridge between these two worlds. Her hospital provides comprehensive obstetric care, but the atmosphere is that of a neighborhood home.
The Mehta Legacy
Raj’s family life is a mirror of her professional commitment. Her husband, Ashwin, is a contractor, and their children have largely stayed within the medical and professional orbit of the region. Her daughter, Nutan, followed her into Gynaecology, obtaining her DGO from Wardha and currently practicing as a consultant in Faridabad. Her son, Aditya, is a surgeon, currently serving as a Senior Resident.
At 70, Raj Sharma remains an active presence in Kamptee. She has turned Mehta Hospital into a landmark of ethical care. She is the proof that a successful medical career is not measured by the number of procedures performed, but by the depth of the roots one sinks into the community. She remains a woman who understands that in a small town, every birth she attends is not just a medical event, but a renewal of a thirty-year-old promise.