Global Giver
Dr. Sharvari (pronounced “Sher-ver-ee”) Parghi just
can’t stay still. She’s doing more than just working
hard, though. In fact, she is extending her medical efforts
above the standard and beyond our borders to care for the
world at large. a dually certified internist and pediatrician,
her medical career is one filled with options. Her heart,
however, lies with caring for underprivileged populations.
Dr. Parghi first became interested in medicine during one
of her childhood trips to India. The american-born child of
two immigrant Indian parents, she visited her relatives each
year, and was struck by the poverty so rampant in Indian
society. The daughter of a microbiologist mother and an engineer father, Sharvari had a perfect pair of role models to
follow in her pursuit of the sciences.
During her early education, she
noticed her facility with math and
science, but also took great interest in
law and debate. Perhaps her efforts to
rectify legal injustices were her first
steps toward solving the injustices of
healthcare around the globe.
The St. Louis native received her
undergraduate degree from the University of Missouri-columbia, receiving the highest honors. She then began medical school at the young age
of 19, also at the University of Missouri-columbia, where she became
interested in both internal medicine
and pediatrics. She continued her
training at Baylor University, training
in their combined medicine/pediatrics residency. While in her residency
at Baylor, she had the opportunity to
take part in international electives in
Guatemala, caring for a rural community, and in Botswana,
treating patients with HIv. She had found her calling.
Upon completing her residency, Parghi immediately sold
her townhome and car, and went on a year-long journey of
the world. She and her husband, dr. tarak Patel, a prominent San antonio pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist, lived out of their backpacks on less than $10 a day.
together they visited 12 countries over 4 continents, volunteering their medical expertise at every opportunity.
on their bold adventure, the couple had the opportunity to help countless villagers who would otherwise never
have received care. In one of the medical camps, located in
Kutch, India, they treated villagers that were displaced from
the devastating earthquake in 2001. dr. Parghi points out
that even though they can care for a number of people, the
real problems are a lack of emphasis on education and preventative care, and inadequate resources.
one of the saddest things the couple witnessed were socalled “rag-pickers,” who are children that collect trash for a
living. The payment for the children’s dangerous labor (e.g.
sifting through uncapped needles) is that they can sell anything they find in the trash. despite the sadness of witnessing the world’s poverty, Parghi says that the hardest part was
returning to the US: “You have this huge eye-opening experience of how everyone else lives in the world, and you just
see how much we take for granted.”
although Parghi would love to work in international
health full-time, she feels that she will be more suited to
help on a larger scale later in her career. Here in the U.S., dr.
Parghi is primarily a hospitalist, working at North central
Baptist Hospital and Methodist children’s Hospital. She also
works in the North central Baptist children’s ER. Instead of
working in private practice, she enjoys the variety and excitement of caring for more acutely ill
patients who have fewer resources at
their disposal.
Years from now dr. Parghi says she
“would like to end up teaching, or in
academics, or working in an underserved area.” She is interested not
only in providing care at the ground
level, but changing healthcare altogether. a savvy former student of debate, Parghi encourages today’s generations of doctors to take more of a
political role in medicine. She points
out that because of insufficient lobbying efforts, the government does not
even fully reimburse vaccinations,
making it financial suicide for physicians to offer the most basic preventative care. Parghi is trying to do
her part as the vice President of the
texas Indo-Physicians Society (tIPS)
and as a member of the american association of Physicians of Indian origin (aaPI). Parghi believes that as today’s generations are much more computer
and business savvy, they have an obligation to affect change:
“Healthcare, good or bad, has become a consumer product.
and I think physicians have to embrace that reality.”
dr. Sharvari Parghi was lucky enough to know what she
wanted to do fairly early on. She notes that, for most people,
the hardest part is knowing what to do with yourself when
formal education is complete. Parghi offers reassurance to
rising professionals: “try not to feel so pressured to have all
the answers. Your career will evolve and involve taking risks.
We have opportunities here that nobody has…The potential
that we have to reach and help people is incredible.”
Now about to have their first child, doctors Sharvari
Parghi and tarak Patel will have to tame their foreign voyages. Parghi is happy that they explored some of the more
dangerous locales before they had children. Their next vacation will likely be in australia or somewhere else more
suited to a family. Though she has seen the world, she’s still
getting around to seeing US cities like New York…maybe
when things slow down.
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