Doctor, researcher
and author
Rageshri is a doctor, researcher and author. She is an NHS Consultant in Sexual Health and HIV Medicine based in London. Her clinical work, research, writing and advocacy focus on improving health equity and she is a sought-after speaker on this topic. Rageshri’s own experiences of being unheard as a patient and her work with minoritised communities, have inspired her to speak up about injustice in healthcare.
Rageshri is the author of Unheard: The Medical Practice of Silencing and has contributed an essay to the anthology No One Talks About This Stuff. She is an inaugural Wellcome Collection x Spread the Word writer awardee. Rageshri has written for The Lancet, BMJ Leader and Media Diversified and has appeared on The Victoria Derbyshire Show, Channel 5 News, BBC Woman’s Hour, BBC World Service and BBC Sounds, among others.
↓
NEW RELEASE BOOK
Unheard:
The Medical Practice
of Silencing
Unheard is about who gets listened to and who doesn’t in medicine and how this leads to a culture of silencing that exacerbates health inequities, on an individual and global scale. It’s also about what we can do to make sure everyone’s voice is equally heard and valued; a prescription to close the gap for the most marginalised in society and by doing this, improving healthcare for all.
Published 4th July 2024.
PRE ORDER
Books
No One Talks About This Stuff: Twenty-Two Stories of Almost Parenthood.
Edited by Kat Brown.
A support group for almost-parents in a book, No One Talks About This Stuff is an anthology of 22 essays. Rageshri has contributed ‘Work In Progress’, which is about her experiences of coming to terms with infertility and the importance of recognising both grief and resilience.
BUY NOW
Follow my latest events on Linktree
Upcoming Events
No One Talks About This Stuff
July 28 @ 12:30 pm - 1:30 pm
Primadonna Festival
No One Talks About This Stuff is a support group for almost-parents: it is a place to share journeys of loss and limbo, to confront social pressure and to find courage in the darkness of tragedies which happen every day yet are brushed under the carpet. This captivatingly beautiful, profound and honest anthology opens a much-needed conversation about society and family. Journalist Kat Brown, editor of the anthology and author of It’s Not a Bloody Trend: Understanding Life as an ADHD Adult, speaks to two contributors to the book: Alice Jolly and Rageshri Dhairyawan, about honouring the missing children they will never forget.