In this section
National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) Code:

Internal Medicine: 2445140C0

Accreditation Council for Graduate
Medical Education (ACGME)

ACGME code: 1400500017

ACGME Common Program Requirements

Shilpa Nath, DO

 

Shilpa Nath, DO
Shilpa Nath, DO is an Internal Medicine resident at San Antonio Regional Hospital. She earned her Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine degree at Western University of Health Sciences, College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific in Pomona, California, and completed her undergraduate education at the University of California, San Diego, where she graduated with Provost Honors in Human Biology with a minor in Global Health.

Dr. Nath has a strong interest in evidence-based medicine and has contributed to multiple peer-reviewed research publications through her work in translational and gastroenterology research.

Her academic experiences have shaped her commitment to thoughtful, comprehensive patient care.

She is also dedicated to medical education and mentorship, having served as an anatomy teaching assistant, tutor, and advisor for medical trainees. Dr. Nath values collaboration, patient advocacy, and lifelong learning, and she is proud to provide compassionate, high-quality care to the San Antonio Regional Hospital community. 

Outside of medicine, her hobbies and interests include volunteering, spending time in nature, and baking.


Shilpa Nath, DO
Meet Our Residents


I'm Dr. Shilpa Nath. I'm a first-year resident here, and I completed my medical school at Western University, right close by in Pomona, California. I was one of those little kids that ever since I was a child, I wanted to be a doctor. I had like the little toy set with the plastic stethoscope and everything, probably because I had really great physicians growing up. I had a really great pediatrician that I was able to only share things with, and they were such a positive influence on that I was able to only share things with, and they were such a positive influence in my life that it was just a career that I had wanted ever since I was a little kid. In high school, I started out volunteering at my community hospital in the urgent care. I continued with that background.

I went into college, and majored in biology and did all the pre-med things to get into medical school. Minored in global health as well because I have an interest in community service and caring for socioeconomic managers of communities. It was my first rotation in medical school. And I remember one of my very first patients, they came in with it was an elderly patient. They came in disoriented and it was because of a urinary tract infection and gave them antibiotics. And then within the next day or two, they were kind of just back to themselves. So being able to make that difference in people's lives every single day as an internal medicine physician, that's really what drew me to internal medicine.

And what I love about being a hospitalist, that's what my future career goal is, is that we're able to check-in with our patients every day and kind of guide them through the scary process of being in the hospital. So that's really what I love the most about being an internal medicine resident and future hospitalist, that I'm able to kind of form these relationships whether they be, you know, for a day, for a week, if, you know, God forbid they're readmitted to the hospital again, but just being able to kind of have that connection with patients every day, that's really what I love about internal medicine. As soon as I found out that I was going be, you know, staying in this community that, you know, I started serving in medical school, I was so ecstatic. And to know that I would be at San Antonio Regional Hospital, I was, you know, even more excited. I've been serving this community since I was in medical school and to be the inaugural class is just such a privilege. We really have the honor to be able to kind of shape the direction that the residency program is going and really set the legacy. And so it's been such a privilege and such an exciting opportunity to be part of the first residency class. I'm just so excited that I get to continue caring for this population that I was serving in medical school and the next few years and hopefully beyond.