Principal Director & Head, Obstetrics and Gynecology
Principal Director & Head – Pediatric Surgery & Pediatric Urology, Yashoda Cradle & Children's Hospital
Director – Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology
Director, Department of Pediatrics
Director & Head – General Pediatric
Associate Director, Department of Pediatrics
Senior Consultant – Pediatric Critical Care
Senior Consultant - Pediatrics & Neonatology
Consultant – Pediatrics Critical Care
Consultant- Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Consultant, Pediatrics and Neonatology
Consultant, Maternal and Fetal Medicine
Consultant – Obstetrics & Gynaecology (Urogynecology)
Consultant Pediatric Nephrology
Consultant, Pediatrics & Neonatology
Associate Consultant – Pediatric Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Associate Consultant, Obstetrics & Gynecology
Associate Consultant – Obstetrics & Gynecology
Visiting Senior Consultant, Pediatrics & Neonatology
Visiting Consultant – Pediatrics & Neonatology.
Unlike adult critical illness, which often develops against a background of chronic medical conditions, paediatric critical illness can occur suddenly, even in children who appeared completely healthy just days earlier. This unpredictability is precisely why the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) exists as a dedicated clinical environment, separate from both the general paediatric ward and the adult intensive care unit, with specialised monitoring systems, advanced life-support technology, and a multidisciplinary team trained specifically to care for critically ill children.
The Paediatric Intensive Care Unit at Yashoda Medicity provides that environment in Ghaziabad.
The team of the PICU hospital in Ghaziabad manages a wide range of conditions, including but not limited to:
Not every unwell child needs intensive care, but certain presentations require a level of monitoring and intervention that a standard paediatric ward cannot provide. Recognising when a child has crossed that threshold is central to paediatric critical care medicine.
A child is likely to need admission at the PICU hospital in Ghaziabad if they have:
If your child is deteriorating rapidly, is difficult to rouse, is breathing abnormally, or has altered skin colour, this requires emergency assessment immediately rather than waiting for a scheduled appointment.
Respiratory failure is one of the most common reasons for PICU admission across all age groups. The unit provides the full spectrum of respiratory support, from high-flow nasal oxygen and non-invasive ventilation for children who need support maintaining adequate oxygen levels, through to mechanical ventilation for those with severe respiratory failure. High-frequency ventilation is available for the most refractory cases, particularly acute respiratory distress syndrome where standard ventilation strategies are insufficient.
Sepsis in children requires rapid recognition and treatment within a defined time window, since the difference between early and delayed antibiotic administration directly affects survival. The PICU team follows evidence-based sepsis protocols, with fluid resuscitation, vasoactive medications, and antibiotic administration initiated promptly on recognition. Region-specific infectious diseases, including dengue with shock, scrub typhus, and tuberculous meningitis, are managed with the clinical familiarity that their frequency in the National Capital Region demands in pediatric critical care Ghaziabad.
Status epilepticus, acute encephalitis, and Guillain-Barré syndrome all require a level of neurological monitoring and intervention that goes beyond standard paediatric ward management. Video electroencephalogram monitoring detects ongoing seizure activity that may not be clinically apparent, particularly in children who have been sedated or paralysed for ventilation. Raised intracranial pressure management, continuous neurological assessment, and coordination with the neurology and neurosurgery teams are integrated into the management of complex neurological presentations.
Cardiogenic shock, myocarditis, and severe Kawasaki disease require haemodynamic monitoring and vasoactive medication management that demands intensive care-level oversight. Bedside echocardiography allows the team to assess cardiac function in real time, guiding fluid management and medication titration based on what the heart is actually doing rather than indirect clinical signs alone.
Acute kidney injury, haemolytic uraemic syndrome, diabetic ketoacidosis, adrenal crisis, and inborn errors of metabolism can all deteriorate rapidly without intensive monitoring. The PICU provides close electrolyte surveillance, fluid and acid-base correction, insulin infusion protocols, and renal support when required. Early recognition of metabolic decompensation is especially important in infants and young children, where symptoms may be subtle before sudden collapse occurs.
Children may require intensive care following accidental medication ingestion, insecticide exposure, or envenomation from snake and scorpion bites. This demands prompt identification of the cause of toxicity and timely intervention, which may include antidotes, supportive care, or organ support.
Children with febrile neutropenia, tumour lysis syndrome, severe anaemia, or bleeding complications related to malignancy or treatment often need intensive care-level monitoring. The PICU team works closely with paediatric haematology-oncology specialists to manage infection risk, metabolic instability, transfusion needs, and organ dysfunction during critical phases of treatment.
When a child is recovering from major cardiac, neurosurgical, abdominal, or transplant surgery, intensive monitoring and support are essential during the immediate post-operative period. The PICU hospital in Ghaziabad provides this level of care within the same institution, ensuring seamless coordination with surgical teams and rapid intervention if post-operative complications arise.
Severe trauma, accidental drowning, polytrauma, and other life-threatening emergencies may require immediate airway support, circulatory stabilisation, and neurological monitoring. The PICU is equipped to manage children who arrive in unstable condition after emergency resuscitation, with rapid escalation to advanced life support when needed.
Critically ill children often require carefully planned nutritional support, sedation, analgesia, and delirium prevention as part of their recovery. The PICU team ensures that feeding, comfort, sleep, and mobilisation are addressed alongside organ support, because recovery in children depends on more than stabilising vital signs alone.
Some children present with failure of more than one organ system at the same time, such as respiratory failure with shock, or neurological illness complicated by renal or hepatic dysfunction. These cases require coordinated, multidisciplinary management with continuous reassessment, and the PICU is designed to provide that level of integrated care.
Children in intensive care are especially vulnerable to hospital-acquired infections, so strict infection control practices are maintained throughout the unit. At the same time, family-centred care remains a priority, with regular communication, counselling, and involvement of parents in the child's recovery process wherever clinically appropriate.
The unit at Yashoda Medicity is equipped with paediatric and neonatal ventilators capable of delivering a range of ventilation modes. This includes high-frequency oscillatory ventilation for refractory respiratory failure, non-invasive ventilation systems, and high-flow nasal oxygen therapy for children who can be managed without intubation.
For children with severe cardiac or respiratory failure that cannot be managed with conventional support, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation provides temporary mechanical circulatory and respiratory support while the underlying condition is treated or stabilised. Having this capability within the PICU allows critically ill children to receive advanced life support locally, avoiding the risks associated with urgent transfers to distant centres.
Every PICU bed is equipped with continuous monitoring of heart rate, oxygen saturation, blood pressure, respiratory rate, and temperature, with arterial and central venous monitoring available for haemodynamically unstable children. Advanced infusion pumps deliver vasoactive medications, sedation, and nutrition with the precision that paediatric dosing requires, where small errors in drug delivery can have significant consequences.
Point-of-care ultrasound allows rapid assessment of cardiac function, fluid status, and organ perfusion at the bedside, supporting clinical decisions without the delay of arranging formal imaging. Bedside echocardiography is particularly valuable in shock states, where understanding cardiac function guides the choice between fluid therapy, vasoactive medication, or other interventions.
Rapid laboratory results and imaging can significantly influence time-sensitive clinical decisions within the PICU. The unit has access to blood gas analysis, electrolyte testing, blood counts, cultures, and imaging services without the delays associated with external processing.
Dedicated isolation areas help protect vulnerable children with contagious infections and reduce the risk of cross-infection within the unit.
The PICU also supports children who need acute kidney care, including fluid management and dialysis when required.
Specialised transport support is available for critically ill children who need safe transfer to or from the PICU.
Comfortable waiting and counselling spaces help families stay informed and supported during a child’s critical illness.
Admission and Stabilisation: The child is assessed immediately on arrival.
Ongoing Intensive Care: The paediatric intensivist and nursing team monitor the child continuously, adjusting ventilation, medications, fluid balance, and nutrition as needed. Subspecialty input from neurology, cardiology, nephrology, and surgical teams is incorporated whenever required.
Family Support: Throughout the child's stay, parents are kept informed about their condition, treatment progress, and clinical decisions, with counselling support available whenever needed.
Step-Down and Recovery: As the child stabilises, care is transitioned from intensive care to high-dependency care and then to standard paediatric ward-level care.
Discharge Planning: The final step involves providing families with clear guidance on the child's condition, any ongoing care needs, and follow-up arrangements before discharge.
Paediatric critical illness arrives quickly and demands an equally rapid, highly coordinated response. The difference between a well-equipped paediatric intensive care unit and a standard paediatric ward becomes most apparent during the first critical hours of a medical emergency, when timely intervention can significantly influence outcomes.
The Paediatric Intensive Care Unit at Yashoda Medicity, Ghaziabad provides tertiary-level critical care for children across the full age range.
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Taken consultation in cardiology ops with Dr. Vikas Keshri. Really happy to consult—very soft spoken and explained my treatment. Happy to visit Yashoda Medicity.
All experience good, patient treatment was good, satisfied with all the services, nursing staff and doctors team also good and cooperative.
I had an excellent experience at Yashoda Hospital for my mother’s Total Knee Replacement Surgery.
From a clinical perspective, Dr. Amit Sharma and his team were outstanding. Their expertise and professionalism were evident throughout the process, and they did a fantastic job with the surgery and post-operative care.
Beyond the medical treatment, the administrative side was equally impressive. Mr. Varun took complete charge of the Insurance (TPA) and admission process, ensuring everything was seamless and stress-free for our family. His coordination made a significant difference in our overall experience.
We are truly grateful to the entire team for their dedication and care. Highly recommended!
Mr. Ajeet Kumar Verma from Yashoda Homecare provided satisfactory service of sample collection. Well behaved, humble & polite person
“I had really good experience with Yashoda Home Care, the sample collection was very hygienically taken and pain-free, hassle-free. Mr. Ajeet was the phlebotomist.”
Had a good experience with Ajeet Kumar Verma from Yashoda Home Care who supported me while I was looking for someone to dress my mom’s stitches. He is very professional and a caring person.
Great support and service by the Home care department. Everyone from Ms Niharika, Mr. Anoop to all the attendants including Mr. Natwar Pandey, Mr Inam and Mr. Ajit, all have been superbly supportive and helpful throughout. God bless you all and highly recommended.
Very good services in home care Yashoda hospital his ish
Caretaker Deepanshu and Jatin and Satish is very good caretaker I have never seen better care takers in my life.
And he is very polite behaviour and friend in nature
Yashoda hospital Kaushambi service is very good according other hospital and other home care services
The home care facility provided by the hospital is also good, the staff which was at home was cooperative.
Home care services are Good. Mr. सुनील Sajwan was cooperative and the केयर taker Mrs. Shushila's वर्क has been quite satisfactory.
Had a. Very good experience with Yashoda Homecare, Kaushambi. The staff was very cooperative with excellent on time services. I would like to give a special mention to Mr Sunil Sajwan (Sales) and Sushila ji (PCA) for their quick response and excellent services.
Fully satisfied Mr .Ajeet Kumar Verma service Yashoda home care . vry good
Was great to recieve the best homecare services from yashoda hospital and really impressed with Ms. Niharika's support at the initial phase followed by Mr. Natwar Pandey who was really supportive in taking care of my father basic daily needs.
Thanks for all the support