
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Fourth-year neurosurgery resident Dr. Subhashree Hari (P.D. Hinduja Hospital, Mumbai) joins Neurosurgery Tales to talk about what residency really looks like inside one of India’s busiest centers: high-volume clinics, learning under national leaders, the first mistake you never forget, and why communication can matter as much as the knife. Subtle cultural contrasts emerge naturally as we discuss training realities, resources, and mindset.
In this episode
The long path into Indian neurosurgery residency
Mentorship under top surgeons: inspiration vs. expectation
80–100 patient clinics: speed, stamina, and what actually sticks
The hardest non-surgical skill: clear, right-sized communication
The “first mistake” and how to prioritize under pressure
Case presentations and turning data into a story that lands
What her program does well, and how residents fill the gaps
Build up or break down first? A realistic view of resilience
Failure, “mediocrity,” and keeping the patient first
The 10-year vision: subspecialty, family, access, and teaching
Guest
Dr. Subhashree Hari • 4th-Year Neurosurgery Resident
P.D. Hinduja National Hospital & MRC, Mumbai, India
Chapters
00:00 Intro
01:00 When residency first felt real
04:20 Training under India’s leading neurosurgeons
06:00 High-volume clinics: sharper or just tired?
08:00 The hardest non-surgical skill: communication
14:15 The first mistake you never forget
20:25 How to turn medical data into a compelling narrative
24:45 What Indian programs do well (and where residents self-correct)
29:30 Build up vs. break down
33:45 Failure, mediocrity, and keeping outcomes first
39:30 A 10-year vision: subspecialty, family, access, teaching
45:15 Closing
About the show
Neurosurgery Tales shares modern, honest conversations with neurosurgeons and residents worldwide.
Contact / Collabs
Press, academic, and sponsorship: [email protected]
By Aureliana Toma5
22 ratings
Fourth-year neurosurgery resident Dr. Subhashree Hari (P.D. Hinduja Hospital, Mumbai) joins Neurosurgery Tales to talk about what residency really looks like inside one of India’s busiest centers: high-volume clinics, learning under national leaders, the first mistake you never forget, and why communication can matter as much as the knife. Subtle cultural contrasts emerge naturally as we discuss training realities, resources, and mindset.
In this episode
The long path into Indian neurosurgery residency
Mentorship under top surgeons: inspiration vs. expectation
80–100 patient clinics: speed, stamina, and what actually sticks
The hardest non-surgical skill: clear, right-sized communication
The “first mistake” and how to prioritize under pressure
Case presentations and turning data into a story that lands
What her program does well, and how residents fill the gaps
Build up or break down first? A realistic view of resilience
Failure, “mediocrity,” and keeping the patient first
The 10-year vision: subspecialty, family, access, and teaching
Guest
Dr. Subhashree Hari • 4th-Year Neurosurgery Resident
P.D. Hinduja National Hospital & MRC, Mumbai, India
Chapters
00:00 Intro
01:00 When residency first felt real
04:20 Training under India’s leading neurosurgeons
06:00 High-volume clinics: sharper or just tired?
08:00 The hardest non-surgical skill: communication
14:15 The first mistake you never forget
20:25 How to turn medical data into a compelling narrative
24:45 What Indian programs do well (and where residents self-correct)
29:30 Build up vs. break down
33:45 Failure, mediocrity, and keeping outcomes first
39:30 A 10-year vision: subspecialty, family, access, teaching
45:15 Closing
About the show
Neurosurgery Tales shares modern, honest conversations with neurosurgeons and residents worldwide.
Contact / Collabs
Press, academic, and sponsorship: [email protected]

21,182 Listeners

192 Listeners

20 Listeners

368,661 Listeners

103 Listeners

13 Listeners

47,622 Listeners

116 Listeners

322 Listeners

88 Listeners

452 Listeners