{"id":10056,"date":"2026-03-10T23:38:59","date_gmt":"2026-03-11T05:08:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/books.kalantri.co.in\/?post_type=architect&#038;p=10056"},"modified":"2026-03-18T17:32:10","modified_gmt":"2026-03-18T23:02:10","slug":"dr-shakuntala-chhabra","status":"publish","type":"architect","link":"https:\/\/sp.kalantri.co.in\/gmc73\/architect\/dr-shakuntala-chhabra\/","title":{"rendered":"Dr. Shakuntala Chhabra"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>Gondia, the Eye Camps, and the Generous Doctor<\/h2>\n<p>Shakuntala Chhabra was born on November 22, 1949, in Gondia, the youngest of six children of Amir Chand Chhabra, a forest contractor who had migrated from Rawalpindi. Two childhood experiences crystallised her understanding of what medicine was actually for. At rural eye camps, she watched doctors restore sight to blind patients \u2014 skill and kindness functioning as an inseparable unit. At home, she watched their family doctor treat her ailing brother every single time without ever taking a rupee. Both images carried the same essential truth: medicine was the combination of elite competence and raw generosity. She decided she wanted to be exactly that kind of doctor.<\/p>\n<p>She entered Government Medical College, Nagpur, in 1966, graduated MBBS in 1970, and completed both her DGO and MD in Obstetrics and Gynaecology in a blistering two and a half years \u2014 an early signal of the intensity she would bring to everything she undertook. When she chose Obstetrics over a more comfortable research or administrative path, her mentors were surprised. But for her, the emotional connection with patients was not supplementary to the clinical work; it was the entire foundation.<\/p>\n<h2>The Crucible<\/h2>\n<p>In July 1975, during the Emergency, she joined MGIMS as Lecturer. The night of the massive haemorrhage came shortly after her arrival. The mother lay pale, her pulse racing, her skin cold and clammy. The bleeding refused to stop. She was twenty-six years old, newly arrived in Sevagram, fresh from her MD, and entirely alone with the catastrophic emergency unfolding in front of her. That night, she saved two lives. The choice she had made \u2014 to be in the wards with desperate women rather than in a comfortable research post \u2014 became, in that delivery room, a lifelong mission.<\/p>\n<p>By 1980, like many of her peers, she considered leaving. Prestigious institutions presented themselves as possibilities. Dr. Nayar tried to create a new administrative path in Social Obstetrics to retain her, but Dr. Chhabra declined \u2014 she knew her strengths lay in hands-on patient care, not in administration. She chose to stay in the wards. The forty-nine years began to accumulate.<\/p>\n<p>She chose not to marry. Brief breaks at her nearby home offered nothing more than a simple meal and a half-cup of tea before she rushed back. Hunger and fatigue were treated as minor inconveniences. The department was not just her job; it was her entire life.<\/p>\n<h2>The Villages and the World<\/h2>\n<p>As director of the Family Planning Unit for seventeen years, she expanded its scope far beyond contraception \u2014 introducing cluster immunisations, launching cervical cancer screenings, and educating rural women on reproductive health. The dusty villages of Vidarbha became her field just as much as the hospital ward.<\/p>\n<p>In 1989, a British Council diploma programme in Liverpool deepened her grasp of global maternal healthcare. The WHO invited her to Jakarta as consultant; she went, contributed brilliantly, and when offered a highly lucrative permanent role, she chose to return to Sevagram because her rural department needed her more than Geneva did. Further training took her to Sweden and Maastricht. Over five decades, she produced more than six hundred publications \u2014 accumulated through relentless application of research discipline to the clinical problems she encountered every day. The manuscripts she returned to her residents were famously covered in red ink.<\/p>\n<h2>Aakanksha<\/h2>\n<p>In 1987, the sight of a discarded foetal skull near her home in Sevagram shook Dr. Chhabra to her core. She immediately proposed a safe motherhood programme for unwed mothers and abandoned children. Institutional resistance was fierce. Fourteen exhausting years of advocacy and bureaucratic navigation followed. Finally, in 2001, with funding from a Danish agency and the vital support of Dhirubhai Mehta, she secured the licence for an orphanage. She named it Aakanksha \u2014 aspiration.<\/p>\n<p>Since its founding, Aakanksha has cared for 492 infants, facilitated 443 formal adoptions, and supported 613 women in acute distress. The foetal skull in 1987 had been the harrowing beginning of a fourteen-year journey toward a building, a system, and a name that meant hope.<\/p>\n<h2>The Ward and What It Required<\/h2>\n<p>She was petite and frail, eating sparingly, dressing simply, spending almost nothing on herself, living steps from the department, and moving briskly through its corridors keeping watch over every detail. Backgrounds, wealth, and political connections held zero weight in her ward. Elite competence was the only accepted currency. Casual attitudes received sharp, public rebukes. The apron was mandatory. The corridor fell silent.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. Kishore Shah, one of her students, described her with precision: &#8220;Dr. Chhabra was, without question, the department&#8217;s fiercest taskmaster. Her passion for obstetrics and gynaecology was a fire that never dimmed, but it burned those who stood too close. She demanded perfection \u2014 anything less was unacceptable. And yet, she was a brilliant surgeon, a visionary in her field, and utterly devoted to her patients. Medicine, for her, was not a profession; it was a sacred duty.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Beneath this terrifying exterior lay a truth her students only came to understand over time: the impossibly high standards were never about her ego; they were entirely about the patients who needed those standards held. A woman bleeding to death in a rural hospital at midnight needed the resident standing beside her to have been trained by someone who accepted no excuse for incompetence. Dr. Chhabra had been that terrified twenty-six-year-old resident once. She trained her students exclusively for that moment.<\/p>\n<h2>The Measure of a Life<\/h2>\n<p>After forty-nine unbroken years, she left MGIMS on March 31, 2024. At seventy-five, she began an entirely new chapter at a medical college in Shirpur, working to build a 750-bed super-specialty hospital for tribal communities.<\/p>\n<p>Somewhere in a remote village she once served, a mother holds her child close \u2014 safe, alive, and thriving \u2014 simply because Dr. Chhabra was there. This is the ultimate measure of her life. It is enough. It is, in fact, everything.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Gondia, the Eye Camps, and the Generous Doctor Shakuntala Chhabra was born on November 22, 1949, in Gondia, the youngest of six children of Amir Chand Chhabra, a forest contractor who had migrated from Rawalpindi. Two childhood experiences crystallised her understanding of what medicine was actually for. At rural eye camps, she watched doctors restore &#8230; <a title=\"Dr. Shakuntala Chhabra\" class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/sp.kalantri.co.in\/gmc73\/architect\/dr-shakuntala-chhabra\/\" aria-label=\"Read more about Dr. Shakuntala Chhabra\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":10396,"menu_order":88,"template":"","department":[23,32],"role":[],"class_list":["post-10056","architect","type-architect","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","department-clnical","department-obstetrics"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.3 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Dr. Shakuntala Chhabra \u00b7 Professor of Obstetrics &amp; Gynaecology \u00b7 Architects of MGIMS<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Dr. Shakuntala Chhabra spent forty-nine unbroken years at MGIMS \u2014 six hundred publications, fifty postgraduate students, the founding of Aakanksha orphanage, and a ward discipline that shaped generations of obstetricians. 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