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हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 67

सुविधाजनक खोज आपको निम्नलिखित मापदंडों के आधार पर अच्छे विशेषज्ञों को खोजने की अनुमति देती है: डॉक्टर की रेटिंग, कार्य अनुभव, रोगी समीक्षाएँ, विशेषज्ञता, शैक्षणिक डिग्री, और ऑनलाइन उपस्थिति।

पृष्ठ पर, आप किसी डॉक्टर के साथ व्यक्तिगत परामर्श प्राप्त कर सकते हैं। कई डॉक्टर कॉन्सिलियम प्रारूप में ऑनलाइन परामर्श प्रदान करते हैं (कई डॉक्टरों से प्रश्न और उत्तर)।


आयुर्वेदिक डॉक्टर

827
परामर्श:
Dr. Ahalya Saraswathi Bhat
217
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a practicing Ayurvedic doctor who worked as a consultant at Kailar Swasthya Clinic, Uppinangady, and that phase kinda shaped how I look at patient care — especially when you're dealing with varied concerns in a semi-urban setup where not everyone walks in with lab reports or clarity about their own body. Some days were all about Sandhivata or gastric issues, but other days I’d be guiding someone through diet corrections, women’s health issues or skin flare-ups triggered by lifestyle stress.. or no sleep.. or just wrong food at the wrong time. At Kailar, I didn’t just treat symptoms. I spent time actually talking to people (sometimes too long maybe? ha), figuring out what’s underneath their daily discomforts. Whether it's poor digestion tied to emotional distress or chronic back pain nobody took seriously till now — I tried to offer something beyond the prescription sheet. Maybe a different way of living, or at least a diff lens to see their routine through. I also saw how important follow-ups are. Like just checking in if that kashaya actually helped, or whether they did the snehana like we discussed... You can't always expect compliance, but you can create trust, and that makes a big difference in long-term healing. My role was clinical yes, but also part educator, part listener. And yeah, sometimes a gentle push when they’d skip yoga again or ignore ghee from the diet thinking it’s “fattening.” I don’t claim to know everything. But I do know I care — and that counts in Ayurveda.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Cheshta
5
367
2 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. Cheshta and ya this is me :) kind of someone who always leaned towards healing that feels... complete? Not just curing one issue and ignoring the rest. Ayurveda showed me that everything’s connected — your digestion, your thoughts, even the way you breathe first thing in morning. That’s the space I work in. I really belive disease prevention is just as powerful as treatment (maybe more honestly). I’m the type to remind patients about how they’re sleeping, how much water they're skipping, or whether they’re even chewing food properly!! lol Ayurveda for me isn’t just vata-pitta-kapha or giving churnas... it’s a daily system, like living in rhythm with nature n yourself. I try to simplify the classical texts to something real ppl can use — like what can you change today that'll help your joints or your mood. I keep consultations realistic... no crazy 10-remedy combos. Just one or two things you’ll actually stick with. Also I like listening, maybe more than talking. Coz sometimes what a person doesn’t say says a lot. I don’t know if that counts as a skill or what but it really shapes how I treat. Right now my focus areas are general wellness, immunity support, and guiding people to build routine that fits ayurvedic logic but also modern life — ya it’s not easy but that’s the fun part too. Anyway if ur someone trying to feel better long-term not just short relief, I’ll do my best to support that. Whether it’s simple dinacharya tips or deeper things like herb-based therapy or food correction, we’ll figure something out together. That’s kinda the point :)
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Dr. Pooja Meshram
264
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with 11 yrs of hands-on experince in treating people using the classical ayurvedic approach. I mainly focus on chronic disorders—like skin diseases, high BP, Diabetes, and all kinds of Vat Vyadhis. Not just text book knowledge, but real-time patient care has shaped how I treat now. Sometimes it's the itching that don’t go, or that sugar level which just won’t stabalize no matter what they try—those are the people who usually land up at my clinic. And I get it. They’ve tried many things. I try to listen first, like actually listen, not rush them. Most of them feel seen after that. And that's already half healing rite there. My approach is very rooted in tridosha theory, but practical too. I’m not rigid—some cases need more diet, some need proper shodhan chikitsa, and some just need you to dig deep into their lifestyle & routines. I’ve worked on patients from diff walks of life, and trust me, each one teaches you something new. Vata disorders like arthritis, paralysis, or chronic pains—yeah those are tricky, but Ayurveda has tools for them, if we use them right. I like using basti, abhyanga and oral rasayana drugs depending on how the case presents itself. Not every patient gets the same line of treatment—no copy-paste method here. And in skin—psoriasis, eczema, urticaria—I've worked with many such chronic cases. My main idea is to reduce the root imbalance, not just give temporary creams or pills. Ayurveda for me isn't a job, it's kinda a way of looking at life. Everything is connected—your food, sleep, stress, digestion—everything. And my role is to just reconnect people back to that balance. I still feel like I’m learning every day. 11 yrs is a long time, but each person who walks in still brings something new to figure out. That’s what keeps me going.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Aslam Kalal
232
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. Aslam Kalal and ya I’m from Delhi—just someone trying to keep up with real medicine while still holding on to the Ayurvedic roots I studied for. I did my BAMS from Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences, Bengaluru. That phase taught me a lot, not just theory but how Ayurveda actually works when you're on ground, seeing patients who don’t just want relief—they want balance, or peace or just sleep at night without meds. Right now I'm working at two hospitals here in Delhi, which keeps me busy but also helps me see a lot of variation—different kinds of patients, different expectations, and tbh, sometimes even contradictions in symptoms that modern medicine doesn't fully explain. Apart from that, I’m also running a clinic. Didn’t plan it to become something big but yeah, it’s going well... patients keep returning, and word spreads fast here. I’ve been in the field for over 2 years, and while that’s not decades or anything, I’ve spent that time diving deep into both Ayurveda and modern clinical practices. Like, I don’t just stick to one system blindly. I check vitals, do allopathy-based assessments when needed, but I always try to see things through the Ayurvedic lens too—like what's the dosha imbalance here, or which ahara-vihara combo might be the root. Whether it's skin issues, gut troubles, or weird unexplained fatigue that just won’t go—my goal is to listen properly first. I don’t rush. Sometimes just changing diet timing, or oiling the head at night works better than a pill. And then there are cases where you gotta do panchkarma or deeper detox. I won't lie, some days are a mess—too many files, too little time. But then you see someone walk in after 3 weeks and say “I'm sleeping again,” and that hits different. I mix modern diagnostics with Ayurvedic logic, and that combo—when used wisely—can make a big difference. Still figuring a lot of things out tbh, learning every single day, but I do it with full attention to safety, patient comfort, and what the texts actually say. I'm not perfect but I care, and I guess that’s where real medicine starts.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Chaitrali Rajendra Tambe
5
586
15 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who really believes that Ayurveda isn’t just about giving herbs and oils—it's more like a whole way of looking at the body, the habits, the food, and how everything connects together. I got solid training in Ayurvedic clinical practice and feel most confident when I'm using therapies like Panchakarma or planning proper Shodhana for someone who's stuck in a cycle of chronic illness or stress-related issues. There’s just something powerful about seeing how classical cleansing can bring that shift in energy and clarity for ppl who've tried everything else. I work a lot on dosha assessment—sometimes it takes a bit of digging cause symptoms don’t always line up in a textbook way. But once I figure out what’s really going off-balance, I try to make treatment super personalized. It’s not just about giving a kashayam or lepa... I spend time explaining diet changes, routines, sleep timing, and even emotional triggers when needed. Many people don’t realise how big a role lifestyle play in their conditions. Right now, I’m mostly focused on lifestyle disorders and detox-based therapies. Things like PCOS, fatty liver, skin allergies, joint stiffness, IBS, anxiety-linked issues… those come up a lot. I try not to rush. I’d rather go slow n consistent, combining classical concepts with modern diagnostics if needed. Blood tests, reports, scans—they help me track things while still keeping the treatment Ayurvedic in core. I’m also pretty organized about documenting my cases—not just for reference but to understand patterns better. I guess every case teaches you something new, even after hundreds of patients. And I do keep learning, whether it’s updating protocols or trying to refine a virechana schedule that didn’t go as planned. In the end, for me it’s really about finding that balance for each person... not just patching the symptom. I think that’s where Ayurveda really shines.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Nancy
262
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a passionate Ayurvedic doctor who’s always felt connected to the deeper healing principles behind Ayurveda. I don’t see it just as a set of treatments or herbs but more like a whole way of living… one that can really shift a person’s health from the roots. My approach mostly revolves around identifying dosha imbalances—whether it’s Vata acting up or some Pitta overload—and then planning treatment that fits that person’s lifestyle, not just the textbook. I usually deal with cases involving chronic digestion issues, hormonal troubles, women’s health stuff like PCOS or menstrual irregularities, even skin condtions that don’t go away easily. Many people also come to me with lifestyle diseases—diabetes, obesity, fatigue, stress-related stuff. I really try to not just mask symptoms but help the person understand why their body’s reacting that way. I use classical herbal formulations (some Rasayana therapies too if needed), but I don’t stop there. There’s always diet and routine involved. Sometimes just fixing the food timings makes a huge diffrence, right? I’m also a big advocate of yoga and mindful routines. Not everyone sticks to them, honestly, but when they do… results show. My goal is simple—I just want more people to feel empowered about their health. Not scared of diseases or dependent on short-term fixes. I genuinely belive Ayurveda has the tools to guide us toward long-term wellness, both mentally and phsyically. It’s not fast, and yes, it requires patience, but it works. That’s the kind of awareness I’m trying to spread in every consult, every treatment plan, every conversation. If more people understood their body’s natural tendencies and acted on them before things get worse, a lot could change. That’s what I’m really working toward.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Bhakti Hiteshbhai Kava
252
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who's trying to grow deeper into Ayurvedic practice through real hands-on work, not just books n theory. I started off at Goenka Hospital for 6 months—felt like a proper base where I saw a mix of OPD stuff and chronic cases too. Learned how day-to-day clinical flow works... some days were hectic honestly but that taught me a lot. Then did another 6 months at PHC in Talgajarda. That’s a primary health setup, and yeah, here the crowd n concerns were totally different. Mostly rural patients, simple complaints on the surface but often hiding bigger underlying dosha imbalances. I had to think beyond the textbook—like listening more, observing things Ayurveda-style. Now I’m working as an Ayurvedic Consultant at Mahuva. This place is where I feel most grounded so far. People come in with lifestyle diseases, skin issues, stress burnout type things… and I try to go to the root—whether it's wrong ahar-vihar or blocked agni or maybe suppressed emotions showing on skin. I use a combo of Rasayana, simple Panchakarma when needed, plus a lot of talking—counseling is underrated in Ayurveda but sooo useful. Not every case goes perfect of course. There are slip-ups, and I'm still figuring out better ways to balance classic treatment lines with how people live today. But each patient pushes me to be more present, more tuned into the wisdom of our system. And that’s where I want to keep learning.. through real-life practice.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Vaishali Sangram
248
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who's been working in clinical setups for 7+ years now, mostly focused around gynecology and obstetrics. What I really do day-to-day is help women deal with things that mess with their health — like irregular cycles, PCOS, infertility, thyroid probs or stress weight that just won't go away. Sometimes it's the hormones, sometimes it's lifestyle, sometimes it's just... a mix of too many things going wrong all at once. My main work revolves around fertility management, both male and female, and I pay a lot of attention to conditions like insulin resistance, hypothyroid, and other sneaky metabolic issues that often get missed or misdiagnosed. PCOS is a big chunk of what I treat. I see how much it affects a woman's mood, skin, hair, periods — and yeah, confidence too. Every case is different. That's why I don't follow one-size-fits-all stuff. I use a mix of classical Ayurvedic therapies like Panchakarma, Rasayana, and Uttara Basti (yes that one needs careful handling but it’s super effective). But I never stop there. I also go deep into the diet they follow, their sleep, digestion, mental fatigue, all that—everything’s connected right? I believe healing has to feel sustainable. Not just symptom control, but real long-term balance, the kind that sticks. During antenatal and postnatal phases, I guide mothers with practical Ayurvedic support—whether it's safe herbal support, gut care, back pain, milk production, or just calming the new-mom anxiety that no one talks enough about. Sometimes just explaining what's normal and what needs care makes a big diff. I won’t claim to fix everything magically, but many of my patients do walk out feeling like someone finally understood what their body was trying to say.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Sonika Kumawat
291
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who’ve always felt drawn toward the deeper layers of healing, not just symptom-fixing kinda stuff. I worked for about a year at Panchamrut Ayurveda and Fertility Center in Udaipur, and that time honestly taught me a lottt. Like, not just in terms of patient load or practice, but more like how complex human body and mind is, especially when you’re dealing with fertility cases... which is not just physical, right? It's emotional, it's hormonal, it's stressful, sometimes heartbreaking too. During my time there, I got to assist in the treatment of couples facing infertility—both male and female factor issues. That was the first time I really understood how layered these conditions can be. PCOS, endometriosis, low sperm motility, recurrent miscarraige, stress-related hormonal disruptions... I saw all of that, up close. And working in an Ayurvedic setup gave me tools that were both powerful and gentle. Panchakarma was a big part of our protocols, but it wasn’t just detox for the sake of it, we’d really assess koshtha, agni, dosha sthiti, lifestyle triggers—basically trying to get to the root. Not easy, but very fulfilling. I was also involved in patient counseling there, which I didn’t realise earlier how imp it is. Like, people don't just need a prescription—they need someone to listen. Honestly sometimes even just explaining what’s happening inside their body makes them feel 10x better. And I learned to do that—how to explain Ayurveda without too much jargon, keep it real but still rooted in classical science. Apart from fertility, I also assisted in cases with hormonal imbalances, painful periods, irregular cycles and post-natal recovery support. A lot of times, those who came for fertility treatment actually left feeling better in other areas too—digestion, skin, mental clarity, energy... bcoz that’s what Ayurveda does, right? It balances, not just targets. Anyway, that one year at Panchamrut honestly gave me a foundation I still stand on. It shaped how I see patient care—not just as a doctor doing a job, but as a human helping another human heal. That part really stuck with me.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Kajal Sharma
352
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who really got into women’s health right from the early days of my practice. I had one year of hands-on work at an obstetrics and gynecology hospital—where things were non-stop, fast-paced and honestly kinda overwhelming at times, but I learned a lot. Managing high-risk cases, routine ANC, post-natal care... all of that kinda gave me a real look at what patients go through, not just medically but emotionally too. Then after that phase, I moved into Ayurvedic Sewa Samhiti for another year. It was a very different pace but just as demanding in its own way. There I really started to connect deeper with patients, seeing how chronic issues responded to lifestyle corrections and herbs when done consistently. It was less about rush and more about balance. That year helped me appreciate prakriti-based treatment more than before. After that, I also spent about 6 months in an IVF centre. Fertility is delicate, and the cases there needed so much empathy along with protocol-based care. While I wasn’t directly handling all procedures, I did get involved with counseling, prepping, and supporting the treatments—plus learning how Ayurvedic support like uttarbasti or rasayan therapy could help in conjunction. Honestly, that combo approach stuck with me. Now when I see patients, I try to not just look at what disease they have but also how they live and feel. That's where diagnosis actually begins, no? I like to listen carefully—sometimes people don’t say things directly, but you notice it in their energy, their words, or even what they avoid telling you. I don’t rush treatment, and I don’t believe in one-size-fits-all either. What worked for someone might not work at all for the next. That's why I focus lot on understanding their history, diet, sleep, mental state—all of it counts. For me, every patient’s journey is slightly different and honestly, that’s what keeps this field meaningful. Not just curing, but understanding. Sometimes feels like I learn as much from patients as they do from me. I just try to keep that curiosity going.
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नवीनतम समीक्षाएँ

Joshua
3 घंटे पहले
Super helpful advice! Felt a bit lost with all these symptoms but your suggestions are really clear and reassuring. Thanks a bunch!
Super helpful advice! Felt a bit lost with all these symptoms but your suggestions are really clear and reassuring. Thanks a bunch!

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