Best Gestational Diabetes Treatment Doctors in India



Dr. Harmeet Malhotra



Dr. Alka Kriplani

Dr. Anita Srivastava


Dr. Philomena Vaz


Dr. Sivakami Gopinath




Dr. Ruksana Mahate




Dr. Mangala Patil

What Women with Gestational Diabetes Worry About Most
A gestational diabetes diagnosis at twenty-four to twenty-eight weeks of pregnancy brings instant worry: will the baby be too big, will there be birth complications, will the woman need insulin, and will diabetes continue after delivery. The truth is reassuring: with diet, monitoring, and timely treatment, most women with gestational diabetes have safe deliveries and healthy babies. Long-term lifestyle changes after delivery reduce the risk of developing type two diabetes later in life.
How Gestational Diabetes Is Diagnosed
Screening is done at twenty-four to twenty-eight weeks with a seventy-five gram oral glucose tolerance test or a two-step approach starting with a fifty gram glucose challenge. Diagnostic thresholds follow International Association of Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups criteria: fasting glucose ninety-two milligrams per decilitre or more, one hour value one hundred eighty or more, or two hour value one hundred fifty-three or more. High-risk women (previous gestational diabetes, family history of type two diabetes, obesity, polycystic ovary syndrome, prior macrosomic baby) are screened earlier, sometimes at the first antenatal visit.
Treatment Options for Gestational Diabetes in India
Diet modification and structured exercise control around seventy to eighty percent of cases. A dietitian plans carbohydrate distribution across meals with focus on low glycaemic index foods. Self-monitoring of blood glucose with home glucometer four times daily guides treatment intensity. Insulin is added when fasting glucose stays above ninety-five or postprandial values stay above one hundred forty despite diet. Metformin is an alternative in selected cases. Antenatal care is shared between obstetrician and endocrinologist or diabetologist. Growth scans every two to four weeks monitor fetal size. Delivery is usually planned at thirty-eight to thirty-nine weeks unless complications dictate earlier delivery. Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Medanta, Apollo, BLK-Max, and Manipal run dedicated high-risk obstetric clinics for gestational diabetes care.
Recovery, Success Rates, and Follow-Up
With good glucose control, perinatal outcomes are similar to non-diabetic pregnancies. Caesarean section rates are higher than baseline mainly due to fetal size concerns. Most women normalise glucose immediately after delivery. A repeat oral glucose tolerance test at six to twelve weeks postpartum confirms whether diabetes has resolved. Around fifty percent of women with gestational diabetes develop type two diabetes within ten years, so annual screening and lifestyle measures are essential. Breastfeeding reduces both maternal and infant long-term diabetes risk.
How to Choose the Right Doctor
Look for an obstetrician working in a high-risk pregnancy clinic with a diabetologist or endocrinologist on the same team. Ask whether dietitian support is provided, whether home glucose monitoring is taught and reviewed regularly, whether continuous glucose monitoring is available for difficult cases, and whether the centre has a neonatal intensive care unit for delivery support when needed.
Support for International Patients
High-risk obstetric care including gestational diabetes management in India costs a fraction of equivalent care in the United Kingdom, United States, or Middle East. Cancer Rounds arranges the medical visa invitation letter, airport pickup, accommodation near the treatment hospital, multilingual support in eleven plus languages, and full coordination with obstetrics and endocrinology. Patients from Nigeria, Bangladesh, Oman, Kuwait, Qatar, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Ghana, Ethiopia, Cameroon, Mauritius, Mozambique, Senegal, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Guinea, Liberia, Madagascar, South Sudan, Qatar, Chad, Sierra Leone, Congo, Iraq & Uzbekistan, and other countries travel to India for high-risk pregnancy care every year.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will I need insulin?
Around seventy to eighty percent of women with gestational diabetes control glucose with diet and exercise alone. Insulin is added when home glucose values stay above target despite lifestyle measures. Metformin is an alternative in selected cases.
Will my baby be too big?
Uncontrolled gestational diabetes raises the risk of macrosomia (large baby). With good glucose control through diet, monitoring, and insulin if needed, most babies grow normally and have uncomplicated deliveries.
Will I have diabetes after delivery?
Most women normalise glucose immediately after delivery. A repeat oral glucose tolerance test at six to twelve weeks confirms resolution. Around half of women develop type two diabetes within ten years, so annual screening and lifestyle care are important.
Can I deliver vaginally?
Yes, in most cases. Caesarean section rates are higher than baseline due to fetal size concerns, but vaginal delivery is the goal when fetal size and other obstetric factors allow. Decisions are individualised at thirty-eight to thirty-nine weeks.
Is exercise safe in pregnancy?
Yes, in uncomplicated pregnancies. Thirty minutes of moderate activity most days of the week, such as walking and prenatal yoga, improves glucose control and reduces insulin need. The obstetrician can advise on exceptions.
What is continuous glucose monitoring?
Continuous glucose monitoring uses a small sensor under the skin that reads glucose levels every few minutes and is now available in India. It is useful in women on multiple daily insulin injections or with frequent hypoglycaemia, giving a complete picture of glucose patterns.









