My Journey Into Medical Research
- I am a young doctor who once believed that strong clinical skills were enough to make a real impact. While working with patients every day, I followed guidelines and relied on experience. Yet I often found myself asking deeper questions—why some treatments worked, why others failed, and why clinical reality did not always align with published evidence.
- My introduction to medical research was challenging. Reading scientific papers felt overwhelming, statistics were unfamiliar, and designing a proper study seemed out of reach. Rejections and unclear feedback led to moments of self-doubt, especially while trying to balance clinical work with learning research skills.
- Over time, I realized that the barrier was not intelligence, but the lack of practical guidance. Research is rarely taught in a way that supports clinicians step by step. Through structured learning, mentorship, and persistence, I learned how to transform clinical observations into meaningful research questions and conduct ethical, data-driven studies.
- The Medical Research Group was born from this experience. It reflects my belief that clinicians deserve accessible and practical support in research. Our goal is to help healthcare professionals bridge the gap between clinical practice and scientific evidence—confidently and sustainably.
