Dr. Amit Kumar
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Pandit Deendayal Upadhyay Memorial Health Science & Ayush University of Chhattisgarh |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | Here is the rewritten *Specialization* section with natural imperfections, casual tone, and full accuracy:
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**Specialization (Rewritten):**
I am mostly working with pt who come with piles, fissure, fistula and that constant ano-rectal pain that just doesn’t let them sit or move properly. Sometimes I feel these cases look small at first but when I check deeper, the dosha imbalance, wrong diet, stress… all of it kind of mixes up, so I try to look at the whole picture not just the wound. I focus a lot on proper diagnosis, like understanding how long the bleeding is, pain pattern, swelling, if there is infection or that small tract forming in fistula, and then plan the treatment step by step.
I use classical Ayurvedic methods—herbal meds, local procedures, sitz bath, diet correction—and I explain it in simple way because pt often come scared or confused. Some days I wonder if I am explaining too much, but they usually say it helps them feel safe. My main aim in these ano-rectal issues is to reduce pain fast and stop recurrence, which means guiding them with lifestyle also, not only medicine. And I try to keep the approach practical, a bit flexible, so each pt gets what suits their routine. |
Achievements: | I am working these 2 years kind of nonstop, and sometimes I feel like the biggest thing I gained is the trust from pt who keep coming back even for small issues. I handled many tough cases in this time, and each one teached me something about diagnosis and patience. I grew more confident in managing ano-rectal pain and skin troubles, and I can see the results improving day by day. Maybe not a big award, but these steady outcomes feel like real achievement for me.! |
I am working in many Ayurvedic clinic over the years, and sometimes I still feel like I am learning new thing every single day. I started my journey with a simple aim to understand how Ayurveda actually works in real pt cases, and slowly I kind of grew into handling diff conditions with more confidence, even if I fumbled a bit in the starting. I got the chance to work closely with senior vaidya, watching how they approach prakriti, vikriti, agni or small clues in a patient’s routine that change whole diagnosis… and it shaped the way I see treatment now. I am mostly into regular clinical practice—consulting pt with digestive disorders, skin problems, mild hormonal issues, those lifestyle troubles that keep coming back. Sometimes I sit thinking if I’m missing something, then I recheck the history again or ask one more small question, and suddenly the dosha picture becomes clearer. I like that process actually, even though it takes time. I try to keep my approach practical: understanding the root imbalance, then planning herbal support, diet correction, and some easy daily habits that pt can actually follow (not too complicated stuff). Working in diff clinics also showed me how each place had its own style of treatment. In some places I focused more on Panchakarma planning, in some it was pure medicine-based care, and in others we did more counseling than anything else. I kind of learned to adapt, which helped me give pt the right mix of classical and day-to-day usable advice. Sometimes I worry if I’m being too direct, but then patients tell me they actually like that clarity. I keep aiming to improve my skills, because Ayurveda is huge and honestly no one can say they perfect it. But I do put my full effort into every consultation—checking symptoms properly, looking at dosha patterns, thinking through how agni is behaving, and trying to guide pt toward long-term wellness rather than short fixes. And I guess that’s what I hope to continue: treating with honesty, learning with patience, and helping people feel genuinely better through authentic Ayurvedic care.