Profile Overview


portfolioImage

Dr. Anurag Bajpai
MBBS (AIIMS), MD (Pediatrics, AIIMS)
FRACP (Pediatrics Endocrinology Australia)
Ex Consultant, Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourn
Consultant, Pediatric & Adolescent Endocnnologist

 

 

Dr. Anurag Bajpai underwent undergraduate and postgraduate training from All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi. Subsequently he worked initially as a Fellow and then as a Consultant at the Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Royal Children’s Hospital (RCH), Melbourne, Australia. He was awarded Fellowship in endocrinology by the Royal College of Physicians (FRACP) during this period.

Dr. Anurag Bajpai has authored over fifty indexed papers, thirty text-book chapters and two books related to pediatric endocrinology. Dr. Anurag Bajpai is the section editor for endocrinology in Indian Journal of Pediatrics, reviewer for Pediatrics, Indian Pediatrics, Journal of Pediatrics and Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism. He has delivered over hundred invited lectures in India and abroad.

His area of research includes the role of estrogen in peripubertal males, neuroprotective effects of insulin like growth factor I, growth hormone deficiency, pubertal disorders, obesity, rickets, congenital adrenal hyperplasia and type 1 diabetes mellitus. He has authored Practical Pediatric Endocrinology, a book outlining approach to children with endocrine disorders and Children with Diabetes, an educational book for parents of children with Diabetes. He is currently working as a Pediatric and Adolescent Endocrinologist at Regency Hospital Limited, Kanpur and Fortis CDOC, New Delhi and Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Gurgaon. He has set up the Pediatric Endocrine Unit at the Regency Hospital limited, the first of it’s kind in the private sector in the state.

Dr. Anurag Bajpai has taken active interest in spreading awareness about pediatric endocrinology across the country and has set up Grow India, a non governmental initiative to improve care of children with growth disorders.