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Dr. Akshay Garg
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Dr. Akshay Garg

Dr. Akshay Garg
JSR Multispeciality Hospital Rohtak
Doctor information
Experience:
6 years
Education:
Shri Krishna Ayush University Kurukshetra
Academic degree:
Master of Surgery in Ayurveda
Area of specialization:
I am mainly focused on treating conditions related to the eye, ear, nose and throat, and I kind of like working across these areas because many symptoms overlap more than ppl realise. I look into things like recurrent headaches, sinus-nose blockage, ear discomfort, throat irritation and even hair related weakness, trying to trace where the actual imbalance is starting from. Sometimes the pt comes for just “pain here,” but while talking I notice a whole pattern behind it, and I keep adjusting my thoughts till it makes sense. I also work with male sexual weakness, where I try to understand both the physical and lifestyle-linked factors before planning any Ayurvedic line of care. It needs a bit more sensitivity and slow conversation because pts often hesitate at first... but once they open up the treatment goes smoother. My approach is usually to blend simple herbal support, some daily-routine corrections, prakriti understanding, and guidance that fits realistically into the pt’s life. Not every case needs something big; sometimes small changes shift the whole picture, even for chronic headache or ENT troubles. I pay attention to tiny details too, even if I miss a comma or two while jotting things down!!
Achievements:
I am kinda grateful for one big thing in my work journey… I received the **Best Consultant Award** in the hospital where I was working, and it still feels a bit unreal sometimes. I wasn’t chasing awards, just trying to listen properly to pts and fix things with whatever clarity I had that day, but the recognition pushed me to keep improving. Maybe my notes were messy, or I missed a fullstop here n there, but pts trusted me and that mattered more.

I am working as a Senior Ayurveda Consultant in an Ayurvedic multi-speciality hospital, and honestly it still feels a bit surreal sometimes because the work is so wide and kind of unpredictable each day. I move between different departments, looking at cases that range from simple digestion problems to chronic disorders that need long-term panchakarma support, and I try to bring a balanced clinical view without losing that traditional Ayurvedic touch that gives the whole system its meaning. Some days I’m deeply involved in planning treatment protocols with juniors, other days I end up spending long time with a pt trying to understand where the imbalance actualy started. In a multi-speciality setup you learn fast that nothing comes isolated—one pt walks in for pain, but the root is life-style; another comes with respiratory issues but the digestion is where everything is stuck. I like that part, even if it makes my thought process a bit tangled while I’m working through it. Being in a senior position also means I guide the team on diagnosis patterns, dosha assessment, panchakarma selection, all that practical stuff that you dont get fully from textbooks. And sometimes I mix modern clinical observations with classical Ayurvedic principles just to make sure the pt gets safer and more effective care. I don’t try to make it fancy; I just want the treatment to make sense for the pt sitting in front of me. There’s also a satisfaction in seeing long-term pts return with improvements—pain reducing, sleep stabilizing, metabolism settling down—and knowing the whole team contributed. I keep learning through every case, even when I think I already understand the pattern, there comes some tiny detail that changes the approach. My aim stays the same each day: to offer treatment that feels honest, thoughtful and truly healing, not just symptom management. And working in a multi-speciality hospital gives me that chance to see Ayurveda applied in its full, practical form, with all its depth and little imperfections that make it real.