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Our Team of Ayurvedic Experts

Convenient search allows you to find good specialists based on the following parameters: doctor’s rating, work experience, patient reviews, specialization, academic degree, and online presence.

On the page, you can get an individual consultation with a doctor. Many doctors provide online consultations in a consilium format (questions and answers from multiple doctors).


Ayurvedic doctors

766
Consultations:
Dr. Harsha Joy
4.83
576,212
18 reviews
I am Dr. Harsha Joy, and I mostly work with women who are struggling with stuff like hormonal issues, skin flare-ups, hair thinning, or fertility troubles that don't always have one straight answer. Over the years, I’ve realised that real healing doesn’t come from a standard protocol—it comes when you actually sit with a person, understand what their day looks like, how they eat sleep think feel. That’s where Ayurveda makes all the sense in the world to me. My clinical work revolves around women’s health—especially gynecology and infertility care. Many women who reach out to me have tried many things, felt confused or unheard. Whether it’s PCOS, irregular cycles, or just feeling "off" hormonally, I try to look at the root imbalance—agni, ama, ojas—basic Ayurvedic fundamentals that still explain modern conditions better than most charts or labels. Fertility support is something close to my heart... we don’t rush anything. It’s more like—let’s fix the ecosystem inside first. I also work with chronic skin and hair problems. Acne that just won't leave, hyperpigmentation, postpartum hair loss, oily scalp with dandruff... and again, for these too, it’s usually not a skin problem. It’s digestion, stress, sleep, circulation—internal stuff showing up outside. We work with diet tweaks, gut reset, herbs, maybe some lepas or sneha therapy—but always after tuning into what *your* body wants. Outside my clinic I write a lot. I'm part of content teams that simplify Ayurveda into understandable bits—whether it's about hormonal balance or skincare or daily routines. Writing has helped me reach people who aren’t ready to consult but want to start somewhere. And I think that matters too. I don’t believe in intense detoxes or piling on medicines. The work I do is slow, layered, sometimes messy—but that's healing. That’s what I try to offer—whether someone walks in with hair loss or years of failed fertility cycles. Every body has its own story and my job’s just to hear it right. Maybe guide it back home.
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Dr Sujal Patil
4.88
649,646
17 reviews
I am an Ayurveda practitioner with 14+ years in the field... kind of feels surreal sometimes, coz I still learn somthing new every week. Most of what I do is rooted in the classics—Charaka, Sushruta, the texts never fail—but I also believe in using whatever modern tools help make things more precise, especially when it comes to diagnosis or tracking progress. I’m not the kind to over-medicate or go for a one-size-fits-all plan. Never made sense to me. Each case is unique, and I treat it that way. What I mostly focus on is getting to the actual cause, not just calming symptoms for now n watching them come back again. That means a lot of time goes into diet correction, lifestyle resets and explaining things in a way that patients *actually* get what’s happening in their body. I like seeing patients get involved in their own healing, not just follow prescriptions blindly. Sometimes we even manage chronic stuff with minimal meds—just by adjusting food patterns n metabolism slowly back to normal. That part honestly makes me feel most connected to why I chose Ayurveda in the first place. Over the years I’ve treated all kinds of conditions—gut issues, metabolic imbalance, hormonal shifts, skin flareups, even some tricky autoimmune cases. Clinical practice keeps me grounded but I also keep an eye on research. Evidence matters. I’ve published and presented a few times, nothing flashy—just real data from real work. I use that to fine-tune protocols, esp around Panchakarma and Rasayana, which I use often but only where it fits right. End of day, I just want to offer safe and effective care without side-effects. Ayurveda can do that, if you understand the person as a whole—not just as a diagnosis. If you ask me, that’s what makes it timeless.
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Dr. Ayush Varma
4.95
527,833
20 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic physician with an MD from AIIMS—yeah, the 2008 batch. That time kinda shaped everything for me... learning at that level really forces you to think deeper, not just follow protocol. Now, with 15+ years in this field, I mostly work with chronic stuff—autoimmune issues, gut-related problems, metabolic syndrome... those complex cases where symptoms overlap n patients usually end up confused after years of going in circles. I don’t rush to treat symptoms—I try to dig into what’s actually causing the system to go off-track. I guess that’s where my training really helps, especially when blending classical Ayurveda with updated diagnostics. I did get certified in Panchakarma & Rasayana therapy, which I use quite a lot—especially in cases where tissue-level nourishment or deep detox is needed. Rasayana has this underrated role in post-illness recovery n immune stabilization, which most people miss. I’m pretty active in clinical research too—not a full-time academic or anything, but I’ve contributed to studies on how Ayurveda helps manage diabetes, immunity burnout, stress dysregulation, things like that. It’s been important for me to keep a foot in that evidence-based space—not just because of credibility but because it keeps me from becoming too rigid in practice. I also get invited to speak at wellness events n some integrative health conferences—sharing ideas around patient-centered treatment models or chronic care via Ayurvedic frameworks. I practice full-time at a wellness centre that’s serious about Ayurveda—not just the spa kind—but real, protocol-driven, yet personalised medicine. Most of my patients come to me after trying a lot of other options, which makes trust-building a huge part of what I do every single day.
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Dr Shibil bashid T
840
0 reviews
I am Dr. Shibil Bashid T, practicing Ayurveda in Malappuram, Kerala since 2022. I mostly focus on making things simple for people—like how to really *understand* their body instead of just jumping from one medicine to next. My main approach is rooted in classical Ayurveda but I keep things practical, like not everybody can follow intense regimens right? I work to find that balance. I do both in-clinic and online consults—through platforms like NirogStreet, Amrutam, Foot Cure Consultancy, and honestly a lot of folks reach out through Instagram too. It's suprising how many people are just waiting to be heard, properly. Whether they have thyroid issues, digestion mess-ups, periods problems, stress overloads or infertility—I try to go deep into the cause, dosha imbalance, what their prakriti is telling, and where it went off-track. That’s where I start. My plans aren’t just about giving a bunch of tablets. Most cases need lifestyle rewiring, some food correction, and mental ease. I use diet charts, simple dinacharya hacks, herbs when needed, and Panchakarma if it fits their body condition. I explain everything to my patients—why I’m suggesting it, what might change first, what takes time... 'cause otherwise they just follow blindly or worse, drop mid-way. There’s a lot of chronic cases nowadays where ppl feel stuck even after years of meds—like no real shift in how they feel. I try to open that stuck point. Not always quick, but I’ve seen solid changes with consistency. My consultations are basically like collaborations—I’m not the only one working, the patient has to join in too. I’m still learning, tbh. Ayurveda is huge and every person teaches me something new. But I’m clear about one thing—I want this system to feel *real* and usable to people in today's life, not something outdated or unreachable. That’s kinda what keeps me going.
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Dr. Siddhi Patil
5
1,196
1 reviews
I am an Ayurveda consultant who’s been walking this path for more than 10 yrs now—still learning, still figuring how deep this system really goes. I did my BAMS from Gomantak Ayurveda Mahavidyalaya, Shiroda-Goa, and honestly those years gave me more than just a degree... they shaped how I see the body, mind n dis-ease itself. Later, I felt like sth was still missing in my understanding, and that led me to a Diploma in Yoga Shastra from Kavikulaguru Kalidas Sanskrit Vishwavidyalaya, Ramtek. That part brought more clarity about subtle healing—breath, posture, timing—all that. I worked as a House Officer at Kamakshi Arogyadham, Goa, where I actually got to *do* Ayurveda, not just read it. From abhyanga to basti to deep patient listening, that’s where I got hands-on. Later I joined a senior practitioner in Goa (don’t wanna name-drop here, but it was intense), learned so much just by observing how he handled chronic cases with so much patience, like real real patience. Every case there felt like a mini puzzle, and honestly, I still keep those lessons close. I also worked under the Directorate of Health Services as an Ayush doctor. That was a different experience altogether, treating people from different walks of life—daily wage workers, teachers, housewives, retirees—most of them just needed someone to listen without rushing. Whether it was skin issues or joint pain or thyroid, I always tried to see beyond symptoms. I usually blend Ayurveda therapies, diet tweaks, yoga, and sometimes just daily routine resets. My focus? Long-term shifts, not short fixes. Most ppl come with layers—emotional, lifestyle, genetic, gut—and I try to peel that with them gently. Each prakriti reacts diff, so I adjust things slowly, based on how the patient feels, not just textbook protocols. I'm not here to just chase lab reports or throw herbs at symptoms. I want ppl to understand their own patterns. That’s the goal.
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Dr. Laxmi Koppar
649
0 reviews
I am working these days as a Consultant and also as Assistant Professor at KLE Ayurvedic Medical College and Hospital in Belgaum, and honestly this mix of clinical and academic roles keeps me on my toes. On the hospital side, I sit with patients, listen to their stories, check prakriti, dosha state, and try to trace the samprapti—the disease chain—before deciding the line of care. For me, only managing symptoms feels incomplete, I want to go deeper, reach the root imbalance and build a plan that actually lasts. Sometimes that means Panchakarma, sometimes just a simple churna or oil with clear diet and routine corrections. I try to keep the plans practical, something that patients can really follow in daily life, otherwise the best advice is useless. On the teaching side, being with students brings a diff energy. I like explaining Ayurveda in a way that is clear but not rigid, showing how classical concepts connect with modern health challenges. I also encourage them to ask, to doubt, to read research and not just repeat verses. Teaching often makes me re-think my own understanding, and in many ways, students push me to stay sharper and more updated. In both spaces, I focus on patient education too. I don’t want people to feel they are just taking medicines blindly—I explain why a herb is chosen, why a certain pathya (diet) matters, why lifestyle routines must be shifted. That awareness makes patients part of the healing process, and in turn, their compliance is better. Sometimes in the pharmacy discussions or academic forums, we talk about how Ayurveda can stay authentic and yet be seen with respect in integrative healthcare. I strongly feel evidence-based Ayurveda is the way forward, not by diluting it but by showing how its principles can align with science and still remain true to the roots. At the end of day, whether in clinic or classroom, my aim is same—to keep Ayurveda real, useful, and ethical. I want patients to feel cared and see real results, and I want students to carry Ayurveda with integrity into the future. For me that balance of compassion, knowledge, and practice is what keeps this journey meaningful.
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Dr. Kaushiki Shandilya
601
0 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic physician with 3 years of focused practice in gynecology, and most of my work really moves around supporting women through the different phases of health challenges that come up. From menstrual disorders and PCOS to infertility, antenatal and postnatal care, my approach is to go beyond treating the symptoms and look deep into the root imbalance. Ayurveda gives a clear way to see how doshas, dhatus and srotas interact in women’s health, and I try to connect that with practical, evidence-based methods, so treatment feels both authentic and effective. In my consultations I spend time understanding each patient’s prakriti, current dosha imbalance and also the day-to-day struggles that sometimes don’t get spoken in clinical terms but still impact health. A therapy plan for me is not a standard checklist—I adjust herbal formulations, panchakarma where needed, diet advice and even daily routine corrections depending on the person in front of me. For hormonal issues, like irregular periods or thyroid imbalance, I guide patients on how diet choices and small lifestyle changes can actually shift balance when combined with medicines. I also place strong focus on Rasayana (rejuvenation) therapies, since in women’s health long term nourishment is often ignored. These help in recovery after delivery, in strengthening reproductive health, and in maintaining vitality in later stages of life. For me, patient education is equally important. When women understand *why* a certain herb, diet or therapy is chosen, they not only follow better but also feel more confident in their own body’s healing. Sometimes there are doubts, like how much to rely on classical guidelines and where to adapt with modern context, but I believe this balance is what keeps Ayurveda alive today. My goal is not just quick relief, but to help women build sustainable health and emotional strength, so they feel heard, supported, and empowered in their journey. At the end, it’s about creating care that feels safe, compassionate, and gives results that last.
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Dr. Saurabh Pandhare
823
0 reviews
I am working as an Ayurvedic practitioner for the past 2 years and during this time I tried to keep my focus on delivering care that feels authentic and practical at the same time. For me Ayurveda is not just about prescribing herbs or doing Panchakarma, it is about seeing the whole picture of the patient—what is their prakriti, how their dosha shifting, what lifestyle patterns contributing to the condition. Many times I find small things, like irregular eating habits or disturbed sleep, making bigger impact than people think, and guiding them on those areas is as important as giving medicines. In my practice I manage a variety of health issues, some common like indigestion, acidity, skin rashes, and some chronic like arthritis, hormonal imbalance, or long-term digestive weakness. I prefer to design treatment plans that are not copy paste but tuned to the individual. Herbal medicines play a big role, but I also rely a lot on simple diet correction, yoga postures, breathing practices, and when needed Panchakarma procedures like virechana or basti. Each of these therapies work best only when matched to the person’s need, so I take time to explain why I’m recommending it, rather than just writing a prescription. One thing I’ve learned is patients respond better when they actually understand what’s happening inside their body. So I spend time in patient education, sometimes even drawing out simple charts or breaking down dosha imbalance in a way they can relate to. It makes them feel part of their healing, not just someone waiting for results. Working with patients so far has taught me the value of compassionate listening. Many times when someone comes with chronic pain or stress, the act of being heard itself becomes part of the healing process. That’s why I try to maintain strong doctor-patient relationships, giving enough time and space for them to share. My aim stays same always—restore balance and help people live healthier, not only free from illness but with better quality of life. I want Ayurveda to be not just a treatment system for them, but a way of sustainable wellness.
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Dr. Abhishek Gautam
909
0 reviews
I am working these days in Ayurveda in two main tracks, one as a consultant physician seeing patients, and the other inside the pharmacy part where I handle production and quality of medicines. At first they may look like seperate fields but actually they overlap so much. On clinical side my role is about listening carefully, checking prakriti, analyzing dosha state, tracing back the samprapti, the whole chain of pathology before I decide what plan is suitable. I keep reminding myself that a treatment has to be realistic for daily life, because if its too heavy or impractical people leave it midway. My idea is not just suppress a symptom but go to the root cause, work on that slowly but surely. On the pharmacy side, I spend more time with raw material checking, verifying purity, testing methods, and samskara—the processing stage where dravya gets transformed into medicine. I make sure that preparation follow classical guidelines but also safe under modern standrads. Sometimes I do trial batches, review dosage, or look at how certain formulations behave in clinical use. That work gave me deeper sense of dravya guna than what I studied in books, because I see how small changes in processing alter the effect. It makes me more confident while prescribing, as I know not just what a medicine does but how it is built step by step. I also work with product development teams where we discuss adapting classical formulations into new dosage forms. There are moments of doubt, like how much innovation is fine without breaking the authenticity, but that’s part of the balance we keep looking for. Education is another part I value highly—I explain to patients why a herb is selected, why diet change matters, or how lifestyle shifts support the medicine. That way they feel involved and not just handed a prescription. For me the bigger goal is simple: keep Ayurveda authentic yet relevant, bring healing that is safe, practical, and long lasting. Whether it’s at the consultation table or in the pharmacy floor, my aim is to merge the science of preparation with the art of clinical application, so patients feel cared for and actually see result that endure.
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Dr. Neeraj Sarjan
1,546
0 reviews
I am working as a Consultant Doctor at Sharmayu Ayurveda Pharmacy, where my daily work is a mix of patient care, case analysis and giving therapeutic inputs on medicine usage. It’s an interesting balance, because I get to sit with patients, understand their prakriti and disease samprapti in detail, then also discuss with the pharmacy side about formulations, dose adjustments and dravya guna suitability. That crossover really taught me how small changes in combinations or dosage can change outcome a lot. When I see patients, I don’t only focus on their immediate problem but try to read the whole picture — dosha imbalance, srotas involvement, lifestyle triggers. Whether its digestive disorders like acidity or IBS, chronic skin diseases, hormonal issues like PCOD, musculoskeletal complaints like back pain, or even stress linked concerns, I prefer to design a root cause based plan. Many times that means mixing classical panchakarma with diet correction, or simple dinacharya and meditation, sometimes it is just about correcting food timings. One thing I strongly believe is explaining to patients why I suggest certain therapies or medicines. Once they understand the logic, compliance and trust improves. In Sharmayu setting I also stay updated on product development and new formulations which makes me more confident to choose safest and most effective options for each person. Some days the flow is overwhelming, with multiple patients plus pharmacy consultations, and yes there are mistakes or rushed notes, but overall it has given me deeper experiance in both clinical and therapeutic aspects. My goal remains simple—to offer authentic Ayurvedic care, practical guidance and sustainable healing that fits into modern life yet holds on to classical principles.
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Latest reviews

Isaac
2 hours ago
Thanks, Doc! Really appreciate the clear advice. Feeling more confident about managing my diet now. Cheers for the help!
Thanks, Doc! Really appreciate the clear advice. Feeling more confident about managing my diet now. Cheers for the help!

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