Dr. Pawan Kumar
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working with gastric disorder cases, dermatology concerns, insomnia issues, piles and fistula management, joint pain, headache patterns, and also guiding patients with special diets for diabetes and weight management according to age. Sometimes these things overlap more than expected, like a skin flare linking back to poor digestion, and I catch myself rethinking the plan halfway through a consult.
Gastric troubles are something I see a lot, and I pay close attention to small triggers people ignore. Dermatology feels different—one tiny rash detail can change the whole direction, even if I mispell it in my notes once in a while. Insomnia cases need more listening, because the cause rarely shows up in the first minute of the conversation.. I try not to rush those.
With piles or fistula I follow a structured assessment but still adjust when a patient’s routine doesn’t fit the ideal plan. Joint pain and headaches come with their own mix of lifestyle factors, and I sometimes pause mid-sentence to rethink what actually makes sense for that person.
Diet for diabetic patients and age-based weight management demand careful tweaks—people expect big diets but small steady changes work better, even if I slip an extra comma or odd punctuation!! The goal stays to make care practical and real for each person. |
Achievements: | I am someone who tried to stay hands-on in my training, participating in Panchakarma and herbal formulation workshops even when I was scribblng notes too fast to read later. I got trained in Ayurvedic diagnostic methods and treatment planning, and assisted in diagnosis and management of patients under supervision, sometimes double-checking things because I felt I might miss a tiny detail.
I also volunteered in community health programs and rural wellness camps, which taught me more practical lessons than any textbook. And I took part in routine and emergency care procedures.. a bit nerve-wrcking at times but very grounding!! |
I am a dedicated Ayurvedic physician trying to blend traditional healing wisdom with the practical side of modern medical principles, and honestly some days I feel like I’m juggling two mindsets at once. I stay strongly committed to preventive healthcare and holistic wellness, because most patients come in with things that started long before the symptoms showed up, even if they don’t realise it. Sometimes I pause mid-consult thinking *wait, did I explain that right…?* but then I go on because clarity matters more than perfect phrasing. My work focuses on managing both chronic and acute conditions with a patient-centered approach that’s compassionate but still evidence-informed. I look closely at digestion patterns, sleep cycles, emotional load, those tiny habits that people forget to mention until the very end of the conversation. A missed comma in my notes or a slightly messy sentence happens,, yet the intention stays steady—to understand the root of the issue, not just list symptoms. I try to integrate classical Ayurvedic diagnostics with updated clinical reasoning, adjusting treatment plans when a patient’s routine doesn’t quite match the textbook flow. Sometimes I rethink a plan halfway because a stray detail suddenly makes sense, and yes that back-and-forth feels a bit chaotic but it actually makes the care more personal. Preventive guidance forms a big part of my consultations: diet changes, lifestyle tuning, simple daily routines that reduce long-term risk. People often expect complicated solutions, but I remind them that small shifts work better—though I might stumble over a word or two while explaining! My aim is always to create a space where healing feels approachable and real. Not polished, not rushed, just thoughtful Ayurveda blended with practical understanding of modern healthcare… even if a typo sneaks in or a thought drifts sideways for a moment.