हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 71
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)।
वर्तमान में ऑनलाइन
केवल समीक्षाओं के साथ
आयुर्वेदिक डॉक्टर
827
परामर्श:
Dr. Rajan Parihar
208
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working as a self Ayurvedic practitioner for about 3 years now – running my own clinic while also consulting at a few other Ayurvedic centres. In this time, I’ve met a mix of cases, from simple seasonal ailments to long-standing chronic disorders that have been through many treatments before reaching me. My approach is to stick to classical Ayurvedic principles but make the plan practical for the patient’s life – cause what’s the use if they can’t actually follow it? I work with herbal formulations, Panchakarma therapies, diet guidance, and lifestyle corrections, adjusting each depending on the person’s prakruti, age, and overall condition.
Some days are more about calming down acute symptoms, like digestive flare-ups or sudden skin rashes, while others are slow and steady – helping a patient with joint degeneration, hormonal imbalance, or stress-related issues over months. I enjoy that variety; it keeps me learning. At the clinic, I focus on listening carefully before deciding a treatment line – sometimes the key is in a small detail the patient almost forgets to mention.
Working in different centres also gives me a broader view of how Ayurveda is being practiced in various settings – and honestly, it pushes me to stay updated and keep refining my skills. I want my patients to see Ayurveda not just as an “alternative” but as a complete, evidence-backed medical system that can address both prevention and cure. Whether it’s a short-term infection or a deep-rooted chronic issue, my aim is to bring the body back into balance in a way that lasts, without depending on harsh interventions that might harm in the long run.
Dr. Govind Dev Jhirmiria
224
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently working in a few different roles that keep me pretty engaged with both public health and clinical Ayurveda. As a Nodal Officer in BMC, I handle coordination and oversight for certain health programs – which means making sure processes actually run smooth on the ground, not just on paper. It’s a mix of planning, quick decision making, and sometimes troubleshooting unexpected gaps in the system. Parallel to that, I work as a Health Coach at Ayurvedam, guiding people through lifestyle changes, preventive care routines, and Ayurvedic wellness plans. This part of my work is more one-on-one, focusing on habits, diet adjustments, herbal support, and small but steady changes that people can stick with.
I’m also serving as a Senior Resident in Panchakarma, where my role is more clinical and hands-on – assessing patients, designing Panchakarma protocols, and making sure therapies are executed in a safe, effective way. Some days it’s about deep detox for chronic conditions, other times it’s targeted treatments for stress, joint pain, skin disorders, or digestive issues. Panchakarma, when done right, needs constant monitoring – not just at the start, but through each stage – and I pay attention to those details.
What I like is that all these roles connect in some way – the public health side teaches me scale and structure, the coaching helps me understand the patient’s perspective outside the hospital, and the Panchakarma work keeps me close to classical Ayurvedic practice. Whether it’s community health, individual wellness, or intensive therapy, I try to keep the focus on practical, safe, and sustainable solutions rather than short-lived fixes. And honestly, seeing patients feel better – whether it’s one person or an entire community group – is what makes the work worth it.
Dr. Shoaib Makadam
217
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in OPDs quite regularly, doing many consultations over the years and treating a wide range of patients with different kinds of health concerns. Some days it’s a mix of acute cases that need quick relief – like seasonal fevers, digestive upsets, sudden skin reactions – and other times it’s the slow, ongoing management of chronic diseases that require a lot of follow up. In Ayurveda, each patient is more than their diagnosis, and I try to keep that in mind in every consult.
When I meet a patient, I don’t just look at the symptoms on the surface – I ask about their diet, daily routine, stress, sleep patterns, even the things they think might not be important but actually are. That’s where you often find the root cause. My treatment plans usually combine classical Ayurvedic formulations, diet and lifestyle changes, and sometimes Panchakarma or other therapeutic procedures depending on what’s needed.
Working in OPDs also means dealing with a high patient flow, so I’ve learned to assess quickly without losing detail, and make sure each person still feels heard. I’ve treated people with lifestyle disorders, hormonal imbalances, gut-related problems, skin diseases, joint issues, and many more conditions – and each case teaches me something new about how differently bodies can respond even to the same treatment approach.
For me, the real goal is not just to reduce symptoms but to help the patient build a foundation for long-term health. Whether it’s someone walking in for the first time or a regular follow-up, I try to make sure they leave with a plan they can actually follow, and a better understanding of their own health. That’s the part I find most rewarding in my practice.
Dr. Yasha Ninawe
216
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am in practice for about 1 year now, which might sound short to some, but for me it’s been packed with learning and real patient interactions that no textbook can give. From day one, I’ve been working with different kinds of cases – some straight forward like seasonal colds or mild digestive upsets, and others more layered like lifestyle disorders, skin issues, or recurring stress-related problems. Each patient has taught me something about how theory actually plays out in the real world.
In this year, I’ve done a mix of OPD consultations, follow-up care, and hands-on therapies when needed. I stick to classical Ayurvedic guidelines for diagnosis and treatment, but I also make sure the plan is practical – because if a patient can’t follow it, it’s not going to help. That could mean adjusting diet advice to fit their daily routine, tweaking herbal combinations to suit their digestion, or deciding when a Panchakarma therapy will benefit them most.
What I like most is how Ayurveda lets you see beyond the immediate symptom. A patient may come for joint pain, but a closer look shows digestion issues or stress triggers playing a role. That’s where the detailed history, pulse reading, and observation make a difference. Even in just one year, I’ve learned the value of listening carefully before prescribing anything.
My approach is patient-first, meaning I want them to feel heard and understood – not just rushed through a list of instructions. I aim for long-term health improvement, not quick but temporary fixes. And even though I’m early in my journey as a doctor, I believe the dedication to each case matters more than the number of years, because every consultation is a chance to help someone feel better and live healthier.
Dr
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5
265
1 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic consultant with experience working in different setups, each teaching me something new about patient care. I worked for 1 year at Sanjeevini Hospital in Gokak, where I handled OPD consultations, follow-ups, and guided patients through both acute and chronic conditions. It was a busy environment, but it sharpened my ability to make quick yet accurate decisions while keeping treatments rooted in classical Ayurveda. After that, I spent 6 months at Vinayak Hospital in Gottigere, Bengaluru – there the case variety was huge, from lifestyle disorders and joint pain to skin and digestive issues. It helped me adapt treatments to very different patient needs, often combining Panchakarma, diet changes, and herbal medicines into practical plans.
Now I’m running my own clinic in Hubballi, Karnataka. Here, I have more freedom to design fully personalized treatment plans and spend extra time understanding a patient’s prakruti, lifestyle, and health history before deciding on the line of management. My approach blends Ayurvedic diagnosis, safe herbal formulations, and where needed, detox or rejuvenation therapies. I focus a lot on patient education too – cause a treatment works best when the person understands why they’re following it.
Whether it’s helping someone recover from a stubborn digestive issue, manage chronic joint pain, or improve overall wellness, my goal is always to address the root cause, not just the symptoms. Running my own practice also means building trust with patients and seeing their progress over time, which is the most rewarding part of the work for me.
Dr. Smita Rai
210
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working as an Assistant Professor at Parul Institute of Ayurved and Research for about 2.5 years now, and honestly, teaching Ayurveda while staying connected to clinical practice is its own kind of learning. In the classroom, I handle both theory and practical sessions – guiding students through classical texts, treatment protocols, case discussions, and the finer points of diagnosis like Nadi Pariksha or Prakriti assessment. It’s not just about giving lectures, it’s about helping them see how each shloka or principle actually connects to real patient care.
Alongside academics, I’m involved in supervising clinical postings where students interact with OPD and IPD cases. This means I get to bridge the gap between their book knowledge and the challenges of actual practice – like what to do when a patient’s condition doesn’t fit the “perfect” description from the texts, or how to adapt Panchakarma therapies based on the patient’s strength and season.
Working in an academic setup also means contributing to departmental activities, curriculum planning, and sometimes even research-related discussions. I believe Ayurveda needs both preservation of its traditional roots and openness to evidence-based validation, so I encourage my students to think critically while staying grounded in the classics.
For me, the most rewarding part is seeing students develop confidence – that moment when they can explain a concept clearly or design a treatment plan that makes sense for a real case. My own practice benefits too, because teaching forces you to constantly revisit the fundamentals and stay sharp. It’s a role that keeps me learning every single day.
Dr. Harshwardhan Sancheti
236
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. Harshwardhan, a BAMS Ayurvedacharya, and my work revolves around bringing the depth of Ayurveda into real, day-to-day healing. My foundation is in classical Ayurvedic science, but I shape it to address the health challenges people face right now – from lifestyle disorders like diabetes, hypertension, obesity, to women’s health issues, chronic pain, and stress-linked ailments. I believe Ayurveda isn’t just a treatment system, it’s a way to rebuild balance in mind, body, and even emotional patterns.
Over the years I’ve worked with patients from different walks of life – corporate professionals burnt out from long hours, homemakers struggling with hormonal imbalances, individuals with years of back or knee pain – and each case is different. My plans are always personal, using herbal medicines, Panchakarma detox, dietary corrections, and lifestyle restructuring that’s actually doable in their daily schedule.
One unique part of my approach is integrating Medical Astrology with Ayurveda. It’s not about superstition – it’s about reading patterns, timings, and tendencies that help me understand a patient’s constitution and vulnerabilities better. This adds a deeper layer to diagnosis and planning, making treatments feel more precise and connected to the individual’s life path.
My goal is to create long-lasting solutions, not quick symptom cover-ups. I want patients to understand why a change is needed, so they become active participants in their healing journey. Whether I’m working with someone on reversing a lifestyle disease, guiding them through a detox, or helping manage chronic pain, the aim stays the same – restore harmony in a way that’s natural, safe, and sustainable. For me, seeing a patient regain health and confidence is the real measure of success.
Dr. Anubhav Jain
238
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am trained in Panchakarma through a certificate course from Dhule, and honestly that learning shaped a big part of how I approach patients now. Panchakarma is not just about detox as many think, it’s a deep reset for the body & mind when done right. During my course I spent a lot of time understanding the theory but also more importantly, the hands-on part – from preparing medicated oils to applying each therapy step with the right pressure, timing, even temperature of the dravya. You realise how much small details matter when you see a patient respond better just because you adjusted a step slightly. I work on designing personalised Panchakarma protocols for each case, whether it’s for chronic pain, digestive disorders, skin issues or stress-linked conditions. The course also taught me to see Panchakarma not as an isolated treatment but as part of a whole lifestyle correction plan, including diet, daily routine and mental health balance. Sometimes patients come thinking they just need one procedure, but end up finding relief in ways they didn’t even expect – like better sleep or reduced mood swings. That’s when you feel this therapy is more than physical cleansing, it’s a reset at multiple levels. I also make sure to explain each step to my patients, cause when they understand what’s happening, they trust the process more and follow the aftercare better. Dhule training gave me the confidence to combine classical Ayurvedic texts knowledge with the reality of how modern patients live, eat, and think. Maybe I still keep adjusting my approach each time, but that’s part of being in this field – learning from every person you treat, and letting that refine your skill day by day.
Dr. Divya Devadas
188
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurveda Physician with a BAMS degree and also certified in Panchakarma Therapy from CCRAS–RAV, which kinda shaped a lot of how I see patient care now. My work is mostly around neuro-muscular disorders, skin related issues, gynecology and obstetrics cases, plus the usual general medicine stuff that walks in daily. I spend a good chunk of my time on Panchakarma consultations – planning treatments that aren’t just a list of therapies but really match the patient’s prakriti, lifestyle, even their current emotional state sometimes.
Sometimes, that means adjusting the treatment flow midway if the body responds differently (it does happen, more than people think). I also prepare medicines myself whenever possible – that part connects me straight to the roots of Ayurveda, measuring herbs, roasting, mixing, getting that perfect balance of potency and safety. Patient counseling is equally big for me.. there’s no point in doing the best Panchakarma if they go back to old habits next week.
I try to blend the classical Ayurvedic principles with what modern healthcare offers now – it’s not about replacing one with the other but making them work together. Whether it’s managing chronic pain from an old injury, helping a woman through a difficult pregnancy phase, or restoring skin health after years of steroid creams, my focus stays on holistic recovery and long-term wellness, not just quick fixes.
I’ve seen how even small, well-timed lifestyle corrections can make a big diffrence, and every case teaches me something new. In the end, it’s about meeting the patient where they are and walking with them toward better health – step by step, day by day.
Dr. Sindhushree Ballakkuraya
196
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in healthcare for a while now – 4 years in clinical practice and 2 years in research. Feels like both sides of the work teach you different things, but they also connect in ways I didn’t expect. In clinic, you see people in pain, confused, or sometimes just lost about what’s going on with their health. You learn to listen first, then decide how to act. My focus has been to look at symptoms in detail, match them with proper diagnosis, and make treatment plans that actually fit the person’s life, not just the textbook idea. Research on the other hand slows you down... makes you double check every small assumption. Those 2 years taught me how data and evidence can make treatment sharper and safer. I got used to digging into medical literature, documenting cases properly, and seeing how small changes in approach can improve outcomes over time. Somewhere in between, I started noticing how important it is to connect modern diagnostics with practical, hands-on patient care. It’s not just about giving the right medicine—it’s also about explaining why and how it’ll work, and making sure the patient feels part of the process. I’m still learning daily, still adapting. Some days it’s busy and messy, with charts piling up and notes half-finished, but I think that’s the real life of medicine… you keep balancing between the science you study and the human in front of you.
FAQ
आयुर्वेदिक डॉक्टर से प्रश्न कैसे पूछें?
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