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Dr. Amina Beevi A S
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Dr. Amina Beevi A S

Dr. Amina Beevi A S
Rudraksha Ayurveda Hospital,Trivandrum
Doctor information
Experience:
3 years
Education:
BAMS From Government Ayurveda College Kannur
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly working around Ayurvedic clinical consultation, gynaecology care, cosmetology work and also the lifestyle disorder cases that just keep coming these days. Sometimes I feel like every patient needs a whole different map, so I rely a lot on Prakriti–Vikriti assesment to figure out where the imbalance is hiding. My focus is on making treatment plans that actually fit their routine, even if I end up writing long notes with a few typos here n there. I handle gynaecology issues like irregular periods, dysmenorrhea, PCOS, leucorrhoea and these shifting hormonal patterns using herbs, diet rules and small lifestyle changes. And I work with obesity, diabetes, thyroid fluctuation, stress-linked problems, arthritis, joint pains, plus cervical or lumbar spondylosis where people don’t realise how much relief simple Ayurvedic routines can give. I also do skin & hair consults—acne, pigmentation, hair fall, dandruff, dark circles, early ageing—using herbal formulations, rasayana ideas, and a bit of steady counselling even though I sometimes repeat myself twice to make sure they got the point. My approach stays rooted in natural healing, preventive care, yoga guidance and patient education, trying to help them feel in control of their own health, even on days when my own schedule is all over the place.
Achievements:
I am kind of proud how my work turned out in clinic, where I kept giving steady Ayurved consults and patient councelling even on days the schedule was messy. I managed good outcomes in womens health, lifestyle stuff and cosmetology care, and got strong feedbacks too. I also joined med camps n awareness progrms, trying to keep learning and contribute a bit more to community wellnes.

I am working as an Ayurvedic doctor for about 2 years now, and sometimes I feel like every day teaches me something new about how patients open up when we really look beyond the symptoms. I mainly deal with consultations, Ayurveda cosmetology stuff, and a good amount of gynaecology work too. I try to do a proper Prakriti–Vikriti assesment for each person, even though on busy days I end up mixing notes or rechecking the same line twice, but that helps me get a clearer sense of their dosha imbalance and what’s actually going wrong inside the system. I handle general OPD cases but I naturally lean more toward women’s health—things like irregular cycles, dysmenorrhoea, PCOS, leucorrhea and other hormonal up-downs that bother people quietly for months. And then there’s the skin & hair part, where I work with acne, pigmentation issues, hairfall, dandruff, even early ageing signs. I keep trying to link everything back to digestion, stress and lifestyle because many times that’s where the real trigger is hiding, even though patients want a quick cream or herb right away. Sometimes I catch myself explaining diet ideas too fast and have to slow down, but mostly I focus on giving a treatment plan that includes herbs, routine correction, small yoga practices, and Panchakarma-based recomendations when they’re actually needed. I also spend time talking about dinacharya and ritucharya, and rasayana practices, because I belive long-term wellness comes only when people understand why the body reacts the way it does. I do get a little carried away while educating patients, saying “just one more thing” before letting them go, but guiding them toward natural healing and preventive care feels important to me. And even when the flow of the day is messy or my writing looks untidy on the paper, I try to stay rooted in the classical Ayurvedic principles that keep reminding me that every person needs a different approach, not a copied formula.