Sekhar Tam Tam

Dr. Sekhar Tam Tam was awarded the Member of the British Empire (MBE) medal by Queen Elizabeth II at an investiture ceremony held at Buckingham Palace on December 6, 2006. The award was given for Dr. Tam Tam’s contribution to health and public service in the British Caribbean island of Grenada.

Dr. Sekhar Tam Tam has been in Grenada’s public service for the past 26 years. He was employed by the Ministry of Health in 1980 as a casualty medical officer at the General Hospital in St. George’s. In 1981 he was promoted to the post of District Medical Officer and he continues to serve in this capacity. As a District Medical Officer, his roles in the community included that of a family physician and an advocate of public health. Dr. Tam Tam has served in four parishes of Grenada including St. George, St. Mark, St. John and St. Andrew. He was a member of several medical boards and currently serves on the Grenada Pharmacy Council. He is also a clinical instructor at the St. George's University School of Medicine.

Dr. Tam Tam was born into a family of agricultural land owners in 1951 in Dachepalli in Guntur district, Andhra Pradesh, India. He was inspired to become a doctor by his grandfather who was a practioner of ayurvedic medicine. In 1967 Dr. Tam Tam passed the matriculation exams of Andhra University. He was later awarded a gold medal in literature in the Pre-university exams at KBN College in 1968. After graduating from Kurnool Medical College in 1976, Dr. Tam Tam joined the rural health service in south India. In 1979 he served at the Kingston Public Hospital in Jamaica before joining the health service in Grenada.

Dr. Tam Tam married Akhilandeswari Pasupuleti in 1973. They have two children Hima and Kiran who are both Obstetricians & Gynecologists in the United States.