Dr. Goviind Mishra
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Major SD Singh PG Ayurvedic Medical College and Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with pts who come with knee joint pain or those long-standing back issues that keep bothering them in daily life, and sometimes I feel like each case tells a diff story of posture, stress, or just the body giving small warnings. I try to read those patterns and match them with Ayurvedic understanding before planning anything. Some days it takes a bit more time to figure out the right track, but that’s okay.
I am dealing a lot with slip disc and disc bludge cases, and I focus on reducing inflammation, easing nerve compression and bringing stability back to the spine slowly. I sometimes pause mid-consultation to explain why a certain movement hurts or why a habit worsens things, maybe in too many words, but pts say it helps them understand their own body better.
I am handling sciatic pain frequently too, and each pt reacts differently—some need gentle therapies, some need strenghtening routines, and a few just need small corrections in lifestyle that make a big shift. I adjust the plan depending on how their system responds, even if it means rethinking things midway.
I am also working with ENT-related issues like sinus congestion, throat irritation, or ear blockages, and I use simple Ayurvedic approaches that actually feel natural to follow. Sometimes I loop back to a point I forgot earlier, or type a bit messy, but the intention stays clear: find what genuinely supports long-term relief.
My whole specialization blends spinal care, joint disorders, nerve-related pain, and ENT concerns in a way that feels practical for pts, not overwhelming with too much theory. I want them to feel that healing is possible with steady steps and right guidance. |
Achievements: | I am completing my BAMS in 2023 and that still feels like a big step for me, even though I sometimes say it too casually. I went through the full rotatory internship with plenty of clinical exposure, some days chaotic, some days calm, all of it helping me learn how real pts respond to treatment. I am joining lots of case discussions and seminars, sometimes speaking up awkwardly, but it helps me think sharper.
I am also taking part in national and state-level Ayurveda workshops, trying to soak up diff viewpoints even if I miss a note here or there. I attend CME programs on Panchakarma and clinical Ayurveda to update my understanding, though I often feel there’s always more to learn. I am staying involved in college academic activities too, juggling things a bit messily at times but still keeping the drive to grow in this field. |
I am working mostly with OPD consultations and patient managment, and sometimes I catch myself thinking through cases even after hours because I like to understand what exactly the body is trying to say. My day usually goes into assessing symptoms, dosha patterns, those small signs people ignore, and I try to connect them into a plan that actually feels doable for the pt. Some days the flow is smooth, other days I re-check things twice, but that’s part of the process too. I am planning Panchakarma therapies with a bit of extra care, maybe too much at times, but I want each protocol to match the person’s strength, their agni, even their comfort level. Panchakarma doesn’t work when its forced, so I adjust steps, add small modifications, whatever fits better for long-term healing. Sometimes I think oh maybe I’m overthinking, but then the outcomes do justify the attention. I am treating chronic diseases through classical Ayurvedic principles and simple logic—root-cause correction, slow but steady changes, herbs that support the system without pushing it harshly. People come with years of issues, and I try to break it down, explain it in a easy way, let them feel they can actually handle their illness instead of getting scared with too many terms. I am also doing preventive and lifestyle counseling, and honestly this part feels underrated. Many pts expect only medicines, but once they see how routine, diet and tiny shifts in habits start creating difference, they get more involved. I guide them based on what they can *really* follow rather than some perfect textbook routine that nobody keeps. The whole idea behind my work is making Ayurveda practical, not complicated. Some days I ramble too much while explaining things, or forget a point and come back to it suddenly in the middle of conversation, but patients usually get the message. My aim stays same—to support healing in a way that feels natural, sustainable, and not overwhelming.