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Dr. Prarthana Hk
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Dr. Prarthana Hk

Dr. Prarthana Hk
Hamsaraga hospital
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Adhichunchagiri Ayurvedic Medical College and Research Center
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly drawn toward shalya and prasuthi tantra, and somewhere along the way I got pretty good at handling those areas in my daily practice. I work with the classical Ayurved ideas of wound care, minor procedure support and post-treatment healing, though sometimes I catch myself double-checking small steps just to be sure I’m not missing anything. In prasuthi tantra I focus on womens health needs around pregnancy care, menstrual concerns and basic reproductive guidance, trying to keep things simple and not scare patients with too many terms. Some cases need calm, some need quick decisions, and I kinda move between both depending on what fits. My aim stays clear—to give safe, rooted Ayurvedic support while keeping the patient comfortable and heard, even on days when the flow feels a bit rushed or messy.
Achievements:
I am kinda proud that I completed my CCAG in 2025, even tho I was doubting if I could manage the workload at that time. That course pushed me to sharpen my clinical thinking and gave me clearer ways to guide patients in day-to-day care. It may look like a small step on paper, but for me it marked a shift toward more confident, grounded practice, and I still use those learnins in my routine.

I am working in this field with a kind of steady focus, though sometimes I still feel I’m figuring things out as I go. I started with 1 year of clinical experience at Adhichunchagiri Ayurvedic Medical College & Research Center, where I got real hands-on exposure to daily patient consults, basic case workups and just understanding how an Ayurvedic setup actually runs. Some days were hectic, some felt too quiet, but all of it shaped the way I look at patient care now. Right now I am working at Hamsaraga Hospital, and here my role feels a bit more grounded. I deal with all sorts of cases—chronic ones that need slow ongoing support and those quick, day-to-day issues where patients want immediate clarity. I try to stick to classical Ayurved principles, doing Prakriti–Vikriti checks, assessing their routine, diet, stress levels n all that, and then forming treatment plans that actually match their lifestyle instead of overwhelming them with too many things at once. Sometimes I spend more time than planned just talking to a patient, trying to explain why a simple change in food timings or sleep habits makes such a huge difference, and other times I just jump straight into deciding herbs or panchakarma support if needed. It’s a mix of structured work and small instinctive decisions, and I kinda like that flow. Working in two different environments gave me confidence in handling varied conditions and also taught me that healing is rarely linear. I keep trying to refine my approach, reading stuff, checking with seniors when needed, and making sure every patient feels heard rather than rushed. My aim is still simple—use Ayurveda in a way that feels practical, approachable and meaningful for each person who walks in.