Ophthalmologists in India diagnose and treat diseases of the eye and visual system — running OPD clinics for refractive errors, dry eye, glaucoma, and cataracts, performing the highest-volume surgery in Indian medicine (cataract surgery, with India performing roughly 7-8 million cataract surgeries per year), placing intra-ocular lenses and refractive lasers, managing diabetic retinopathy, treating retinal detachment and glaucoma, and increasingly running cosmetic / oculoplastic procedures alongside the core medical practice. The path is MBBS (5.5 years including 1-year rotating internship) entered through NEET-UG, then MS Ophthalmology or DNB / Diploma DOMS (3 years for MS / DNB, 2 years for the older Diploma) entered through NEET-PG / INI-CET. MS Ophthalmology has historically been a less-competitive PG branch than Radiology / Dermatology / Medicine, sitting in the mid-tier of NEET-PG cut-offs — making it one of the more accessible high-income specialties in Indian medicine. Workplaces split four ways: dedicated eye-care chains and centres of excellence (Centre for Sight, Sankara Nethralaya Chennai, LV Prasad Eye Institute Hyderabad, Dr Agarwal's Eye Hospital, ASG Eye Hospitals, Aravind Eye Care System Madurai — the world's largest cataract-surgery network), large multi-specialty hospitals (Apollo, Fortis, Manipal, Max with eye departments), government / teaching hospitals (AIIMS Delhi RP Centre, PGIMER, JIPMER, RIO Kolkata, Sankara Nethralaya, AIIMS Bombay), and private practice — usually a single-doctor clinic with cataract / refractive volume that's the bedrock of ophthalmology incomes. The defining 2026 reality: ophthalmology offers the most lifestyle-friendly clinical specialty profile in Indian medicine — predictable working hours, no real on-call crisis (eye emergencies are rare), high private-practice income through cataract / LASIK volume, and a clear surgical-skill ladder where established refractive / cataract surgeons performing 100-300 surgeries per month routinely clear ₹50L-2Cr through the surgery-volume income model.
Ophthalmologists in India diagnose and treat diseases of the eye and visual system — running OPD clinics for refractive errors, dry eye, glaucoma, and cataracts, performing the highest-volume surgery in Indian medicine (cataract surgery, with India performing roughly 7-8 million cataract surgeries per year), placing intra-ocular lenses and refractive lasers, managing diabetic retinopathy, treating retinal detachment and glaucoma, and increasingly running cosmetic / oculoplastic procedures alongside the core medical practice. The path is MBBS (5.5 years including 1-year rotating internship) entered through NEET-UG, then MS Ophthalmology or DNB / Diploma DOMS (3 years for MS / DNB, 2 years for the older Diploma) entered through NEET-PG / INI-CET. MS Ophthalmology has historically been a less-competitive PG branch than Radiology / Dermatology / Medicine, sitting in the mid-tier of NEET-PG cut-offs — making it one of the more accessible high-income specialties in Indian medicine. Workplaces split four ways: dedicated eye-care chains and centres of excellence (Centre for Sight, Sankara Nethralaya Chennai, LV Prasad Eye Institute Hyderabad, Dr Agarwal's Eye Hospital, ASG Eye Hospitals, Aravind Eye Care System Madurai — the world's largest cataract-surgery network), large multi-specialty hospitals (Apollo, Fortis, Manipal, Max with eye departments), government / teaching hospitals (AIIMS Delhi RP Centre, PGIMER, JIPMER, RIO Kolkata, Sankara Nethralaya, AIIMS Bombay), and private practice — usually a single-doctor clinic with cataract / refractive volume that's the bedrock of ophthalmology incomes. The defining 2026 reality: ophthalmology offers the most lifestyle-friendly clinical specialty profile in Indian medicine — predictable working hours, no real on-call crisis (eye emergencies are rare), high private-practice income through cataract / LASIK volume, and a clear surgical-skill ladder where established refractive / cataract surgeons performing 100-300 surgeries per month routinely clear ₹50L-2Cr through the surgery-volume income model.
Arrive at the hospital, change into scrubs, review the day's cataract list (8-12 cases) and the IOL biometry sheets for each patient
Pre-op huddle with OT nurse and anaesthesia tech, confirm IOL power and lens type for each case, double-check axis markings for toric IOLs
Start morning phaco list — phacoemulsification cataract surgery under topical anaesthesia, 15-25 minutes per case, IOL implantation, viscoelastic wash, post-op drops
Finish OT list, change out of scrubs, quick review of post-op day-1 patients from yesterday — IOP check, vision, AC reaction
Lunch + clear messages from referring optometrists and tomorrow's premium-IOL counselling notes
Afternoon OPD begins — refraction with auto-refractor and trial frame, slit-lamp exam, dry eye and allergic conjunctivitis cases
Glaucoma clinic block — applanation tonometry, gonioscopy, visual field perimetry review, OCT RNFL analysis, medication titration
Diabetic retinopathy screening — dilated fundoscopy, fundus photography, OCT macula for diabetic macular oedema, plan anti-VEGF or focal laser
Cataract pre-op workups — IOL Master biometry, premium IOL counselling (monofocal vs toric vs trifocal vs EDOF), corneal topography for refractive cases
Drive to private evening clinic in residential neighbourhood — second OPD wave for working professionals who can only come after office hours
Private clinic OPD — 15-25 refractions, contact lens fittings, follow-up cases, LASIK / SMILE consultations
Wrap up clinic, dictate notes, message difficult-case images to retina / cornea sub-specialist colleagues for second opinion
Home — review next-morning OT list, watch a phaco technique video from AIOS or ASCRS for a new femtosecond technique
Half-day OPD or focused refractive surgery list (LASIK / SMILE block scheduled Saturday for working patients)
| City | Range |
|---|---|
| Bangalore | ₹25-50L hospital-employed; ₹40L-1.2Cr private practice with cataract / refractive volume |
| Mumbai | ₹30-60L hospital-employed; ₹50L-1.5Cr private practice; ₹1-2Cr+ for established South Bombay / Bandra practices |
| Delhi-NCR | ₹25-55L hospital-employed; ₹40L-1.3Cr private practice |
| Hyderabad | ₹22-45L hospital-employed; ₹35L-1Cr private practice; LVPEI partner draws can cross ₹1.2Cr+ |
| Tier-2 (Pune / Chennai / Kochi) | ₹18-35L hospital-employed; ₹30-70L private practice with mature cataract volume |
| Tier-3 (smaller-town private practice) | ₹15-30L hospital-employed; ₹25-60L private practice with cataract volume |
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Homeopathic doctors in India practise classical homeopathy — taking long, narrative case histories, mapping symptoms to a constitutional remedy via repertorisation, and prescribing highly diluted single remedies (Sulphur, Natrum mur, Lycopodium, Nux vomica, Phosphorus, etc.) in centesimal or LM potencies. The qualifying degree is BHMS (Bachelor of Homeopathic Medicine and Surgery, 5.5 years including a year of internship) admitted via NEET-UG with a separate AYUSH counselling round, with MD-Homeopathy specializations in Materia Medica, Repertory, Organon, Pharmacy, Practice of Medicine, Paediatrics, or Psychiatry. Practice spans government AYUSH dispensaries (every state has them, often in PHCs), large homeopathy chains (Dr Batra's, Schwabe India, SBL, Bakson), independent clinics in tier-2 / tier-3 cities (where homeopathy retains strong patient trust), and online-consultation platforms (Lybrate, Practo, Justdial, mPower / Curofy). The profession sits in an unusual place — legally recognised under the Homoeopathy Central Council Act and the National Commission for Homoeopathy, yet the underlying mechanism (extreme serial dilution beyond Avogadro's number) remains scientifically unsupported, with major systematic reviews (NHMRC Australia 2015, EASAC 2017, House of Commons UK 2010) finding no evidence of effects beyond placebo. A clear-eyed practitioner takes the legal-and-cultural reality seriously, manages chronic-functional and self-limiting cases ethically, and refers acute / serious cases to allopathic colleagues without delay.
Psychiatrists are the medical doctors of mental health — diagnosing and treating depression, anxiety, OCD, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, ADHD, addiction, dementia, eating disorders, and the complicated overlap zones where brain biology meets life circumstance. Unlike clinical psychologists, psychiatrists prescribe medication, admit patients, run ECT, manage medical comorbidity, and carry the legal authority to certify mental capacity, sign committal orders under the Mental Healthcare Act 2017, and direct inpatient psychiatric care. The Indian path is MBBS plus MD Psychiatry (3 years) via NEET-PG — competitive but not as crushing as surgery or radiology — with premier seats at NIMHANS Bangalore (the most prestigious mental-health institute in South Asia), AIIMS Delhi, IHBAS Delhi, PGIMER Chandigarh, JIPMER, and CMC Vellore. Workplaces span government psychiatric institutes, large private hospitals (Apollo, Fortis, Manipal, Max, Medanta), stand-alone psychiatric and de-addiction centres (Hope Trust, Cadabams, Manas), private clinics, and the rapidly growing Indian online-mental-health platforms (Amaha, Lybrate, Practo, MFine, Manastha) where senior consultants now earn supplementary ₹15-50L from tele-consults. Demand has structurally exploded post-COVID — India has roughly 0.75 psychiatrists per 100,000 population versus a WHO recommendation of 3, and the supply-demand gap will widen for the next two decades.
Provide therapy to patients with visual impairments to improve their functioning in daily life activities. May train patients in activities such as computer use, communication skills, or home management skills.
Assist patients in obtaining services, understanding policies and making health care decisions.
All health technologists and technicians not listed separately.
Direct nursing staff in the provision of patient care in a clinical practice setting, such as a hospital, hospice, clinic, or home. Ensure adherence to established clinical policies, protocols, regulations, and standards.
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