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Walk into the cardiac wing of any big hospital in India or even the US, and you’re likely to see men in blue scrubs
poring over ECGs, or rushing to OTs to thread catheters through blocked arteries. This medical speciality,
characterised by long working hours and high stress, has traditionally had a lopsided gender ratio. But despite
these odds, one of India’s first cardiology departments was set up by a woman — the legendary Dr S I Padmavati.
Now 103 and retired from active practice, Dr Padmavati was working 12 hours a day, five days a week till late 2015
at the National Heart Institute in Delhi that she founded in 1981. She still comes to the institute once or twice a
week to see some of her older patients.
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29 अगस्त की रात 103 बरस की उम्र में डॉ पद्मावती ने अपने उसी अस्पताल 'नेशनल हार्ट इन्स्टीट्यूट' में अंतिम सांस ली जिस अस्...
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