Dr. Dhole is a cultural and linguistic anthropologist with expertise in qualitative research methods such as in-depth interviews, participant observation, and discourse analysis. She examines the sociocultural and economic factors that determine the unequal structures and impact of care. She is interested in policy intervention through knowledge exchange with community members and experts. She is involved with developing bereavement care package for parents of stillborn babies, designing prevention and postvention strategies through engagement with suicide loss survivors, and partnering with survivors of gender-based violence to support research capacity. To this end, she is involved in developing study tools and protocols, data analysis, writing manuscripts, and training on qualitative research methods. She has wide teaching and research experience in medical anthropology, health research ethics, and urban governance. She has also conducted research in critical care medicine in the U.S. to improve outcomes for patients, caregivers, and surrogate decision makers.