cadaveric workshop

Daradia successfully conducted its 11th Cadaveric Workshop in Interventional Pain Medicine on 17th and 18th April, followed by the final examination of its One-Year Fellowship in Pain Medicine on cadavers on 19th April at Ramaiah Advanced Learning Center, Bengaluru.

This three-day academic activity reflected Daradia’s strong commitment to hands-on cadaveric training in pain medicine, anatomy-based procedural learning, and high-standard fellowship assessment.

11th Daradia Cadaveric Workshop Conducted at Ramaiah Advanced Learning Center

We are proud to share the successful completion of the 11th Daradia Cadaveric Workshop at Ramaiah Advanced Learning Center, Bengaluru.

This edition brought together participants from Australia, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and India, reflecting the growing international trust in Daradia’s structured training in interventional pain medicine.

With 36 participants and 14 expert faculty members and instructors, we maintained an exceptional participant-to-faculty ratio of less than 3:1. This allowed every participant to receive deeper guidance, closer supervision, and more meaningful hands-on exposure on real human anatomy.

At Daradia, cadaver-based learning is not a one-time experience. It is a core academic method for helping pain physicians understand anatomical accuracy, procedural depth, needle pathways, tissue planes, and safety principles in a much more practical way.

Why Daradia Cadaveric Training Stands Out

Daradia’s cadaver workshops are designed to improve precision, safety, confidence, and anatomical understanding in interventional procedures.

Our focus remains clear:
to standardize interventional pain procedures through anatomy-based training on cadavers.

This commitment continues through a structured yearly academic model:

  • 3–5 cadaveric workshops are conducted every year
  • 150+ pain physicians are trained annually
  • In 2026, Daradia is organizing 5 dedicated cadaveric workshops

This ongoing academic effort makes Daradia one of the few institutions consistently conducting structured cadaver workshops for pain physicians in India.

One-Year Fellowship in Pain Medicine Final Exam Conducted on Cadavers

Following the workshop, Daradia conducted the final examination of its One-Year Fellowship in Pain Medicine on 19th April, Sunday, at the same venue—Ramaiah Advanced Learning Center, Bengaluru.

The examination was conducted on cadavers, making the assessment more clinically relevant, technically demanding, and academically meaningful.

A total of 15 examinees appeared in the fellowship final examination. The exam was supervised by 4 external examiners and 2 internal examiners, ensuring a fair, transparent, and rigorous assessment process. The examination continued throughout the day till 5:00 PM.

A cadaver-based final examination in pain medicine is a strong marker of academic seriousness. It evaluates not only theoretical knowledge but also real anatomical orientation, procedural planning, hand-eye coordination, and the practical understanding required for safe interventional pain practice.

Cadaver-Based Fellowship Assessment Reflects Daradia’s Academic Standards

At Daradia, the goal of training is not only to teach procedures but to ensure that fellows develop true anatomical understanding and procedural judgment.

That is why the fellowship assessment process includes cadaver-based examination. Such a format raises the standard of evaluation and better reflects the real-life demands of interventional pain medicine.

Daradia believes that quality training in pain medicine must include:

  • strong anatomical foundation
  • repeated procedural practice
  • supervised hands-on exposure
  • meaningful evaluation methods
  • a culture of precision and safety

Congratulations to the Fellowship Examinees

We congratulate all the fellows who appeared in the examination for their dedication, discipline, and hard work.

A very special congratulations to Dr. Suraj Lamichane from Nepal, who stood 1st in the final examination of Daradia’s One-Year Fellowship in Pain Medicine.

His achievement is a proud moment for Daradia and a reflection of the academic seriousness and commitment that define our fellowship program.

Daradia’s Mission in Pain Medicine Training

The successful completion of the cadaveric workshop and fellowship examination once again highlights Daradia’s mission:
to build confident, competent, and safe pain physicians through structured education, cadaver-based training, and rigorous assessment.

As Daradia continues to expand its academic initiatives, cadaver-based workshops and fellowship assessments will remain an important part of its commitment to excellence in interventional pain medicine training.

Those who could not attend this workshop may join the upcoming Daradia cadaveric workshops in 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

What was conducted at Ramaiah Advanced Learning Center on 17–19 April?
Daradia conducted the 11th Daradia Cadaveric Workshop on 17th and 18th April, followed by the final examination of its One-Year Fellowship in Pain Medicine on cadavers on 19th April at Ramaiah Advanced Learning Center, Bengaluru.

What was special about the 11th Daradia Cadaveric Workshop?
The workshop offered structured, hands-on cadaveric training in interventional pain medicine with a strong focus on anatomy-based procedural precision, safety, and confidence.

Which countries were represented in this cadaver workshop?
Participants attended from Australia, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and India, reflecting the growing international trust in Daradia’s training programs.

How many participants and faculty were involved in the workshop?
The workshop had 36 participants and 14 expert faculty/instructors, maintaining an exceptional participant-to-faculty ratio of less than 3:1.

How often does Daradia conduct cadaveric workshops?
Daradia conducts 3–5 cadaveric workshops every year, trains 150+ pain physicians annually, and is organizing 5 dedicated cadaveric workshops in 2026.

What happened on 19th April?
On 19th April, Daradia conducted the final examination of its One-Year Fellowship in Pain Medicine on cadavers, making the assessment more anatomically precise and clinically relevant.

How many examinees and examiners were involved in the fellowship final exam?
A total of 15 examinees appeared in the examination, which was conducted by 4 external examiners and 2 internal examiners.

How long did the fellowship examination continue?
The cadaver-based final examination continued throughout the day till 5:00 PM.

Who stood first in the fellowship examination?
Dr. Suraj Lamichane from Nepal stood 1st in Daradia’s One-Year Fellowship final examination.

Why does Daradia use cadaver-based training and assessment?
Daradia believes cadaver-based learning improves anatomical understanding, procedural accuracy, safety, and real-world confidence in interventional pain medicine.

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