Floyd Medical Center
The total economic impact of Floyd Medical Center on the local and state economy is more than $752.78 million, according to the GHA. Floyd provides approximately $36.58 million in uncompensated care while generating an estimated 10,400 full-time jobs throughout Floyd County and the rest of the state, including almost 3,000 employees at Floyd Medical Center. The hospital also has direct expenditures of more than $327.32 million.
From Harbin Clinic
Dr. Harsha Banavasi joins Harbin Clinic Pulmonary Medicine Rome and will begin taking patients on July 10.
From a young age, Dr. Banavasi knew that he wanted to make a difference in people’s lives. As a pulmonologist and critical care physician, he’s also responsible for solving his patients’ most perplexing and challenging health ailments.
“In Pulmonary Medicine, most of my patients have one symptom, shortness of breath, and there are hundreds of reasons why they could have that,” he says. “My job is to learn all the explanations of why they are suffering – ask their history with a thorough medical examination, look at their medications, see if there are allergies – and then I pull all the pieces together and develop a regimen to better their quality of life.”
As a board-certified pulmonologist and critical care physician, he is disciplined in infections of the lungs and chest. Due to the complexity of some of these diseases, his knowledge expands beyond the functions of just the lungs and encompasses understanding the body in its entirety.
“There are numerous diseases that could affect a patient,” Banavasi said. “And issues aren’t usually connected to just one organ or cause; I have to understand every function of their body and stay up to date on the latest research and current treatment options.”
Harbin Clinic Pulmonary Medicine Rome welcomes Banavasi to the team of physicians who care completely for their patients.
“We’re very happy to have Dr. Banavasi join us,” says Dr. Kunal Patel of Harbin
Clinic Pulmonary Medicine Rome. “He brings expertise and proficiency in matters of the chest and lungs. We welcome his knowledge and look forward to introducing him to our community.”
Making a lifelong difference
He grew up in a small town in India and fought a relapsing form of malaria for years.
“I would get sick almost every year,” he says. “And there was not much access to many doctors in our small area.”
“One of the times I was sick, a young pediatrician examined me, really got to know me and provided the appropriate treatment,” he continues. “A week later, I had significantly improved and never contracted malaria again.”
He recalls his family being thrilled to see him healthy and thriving.
“I view him as this person who made such a difference in my life,” he says. “I knew then that I wanted to go into medicine and make the same kind of impact.”
Dr. Banavasi has done just that. From asthma to pneumonia to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, Dr. Banavasi has treated severe and life-threatening illnesses and built lasting relationships along the way.
“I remember one veteran patient who smoked for years. He hadn’t seen any doctor in nearly thirty years and was reluctant to schedule an appointment with me,” says Dr. Banavasi. “But he had very severe COPD, and I knew we needed him to begin treatment as soon as possible.”
After a few months of COPD therapy, a patient who once had barely functioning lungs could fully enjoy life thanks to Dr. Banavasi.
“Those patients and cases just stay with you,” he explains. “Building relationships and seeing their health improve is the reason I’m in medicine.