Dr. Anjna Tak
Experience: | 22 years |
Education: | Dayanand Ayurvedic College, Jalandhar |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working in Ayurvedic obstetrics and gynecology, and over time this has become the core of my daily practice. I handle cases related to infertility, menstrual irregularities, PCOS, vaginal infections, fibroids, endometriosis and adenomyosis, which often come with long history and mixed symptoms. These conditions rarely follow a straight path, and that keeps me observant.
I also focus on preconception care, antenatal care (ANC) and postnatal care, where small details really matter more than big claims. My work involves regular monitoring, lifestyle guidance, diet planning and Ayurvedic management suited to each stage, though sometimes progress feels slow. I try to look beyond reports and understand patterns in cycles, pain, discharge or fatigue, even when things dont add up neatly.
Women’s health needs continuity, not one time fixes, and my approach stays practical, patient and steady, even if that means adjusting plans again and again!! |
Achievements: | I am a gold medalist from Baba Farid University of Health Sciences, completed during my BAMS batch of 1998, and that phase still stays close to me. It wasnt just about marks or rank, but long hours with books, clinics, and learning to think clearly under pressure. This academic grounding helped shape my discipline and clinical mindset early on. Even now, that training quietly guides how I study cases, question myself, and keep standards high, though learning never really feels finished!! |
I am working in the field of Ayurvedic Obstetrics and Gynecology for more than 18 years now, across clinical practice as well as research work, and honestly the learning still feels ongoing. My work mainly revolves around women’s health concerns that are long standing and sometimes emotionally heavy, like infertility, menstrual irregularities, PCOS, vaginal infections, fibroids, endometriosis and adenomyosis. Over the years these cases shaped how I observe patterns rather than just reports. I also actively handle preconception care, antenatal care and postnatal care, which needs patience and continous follow up, not shortcuts. Some days outcomes are very clear, some days progress is slow and needs rethinking, but that is part of real practice. I try to combine classical Ayurvedic principles with practical clinical judgement, keeping safety and sustainability in mind. My approach stays woman-centred, with attention to diet, lifestyle, mental state and reproductive health as a whole, not as isolated organs. Research exposure helped me question routines and refine protocols, though not every answer comes fast. After all these years, I still believe careful listening, regular monitoring and realistic planning matters more than dramatic claims, even if that sounds less impressive.