Dr. Bhaskar Amit Singh
Experience: | 6 years |
Education: | Prabhuddh Ayurvedic Medical College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working with liver issues, psoriasis and diferent forms of arthritis, and sometimes it feels like these three are connected in ways we don’t notice at first. I try to look at each case slowly, figuring out the deeper imbalance behind symptoms instead of jumping to quick fixes. Liver care is one area where I focus a lot on detox principles, diet shifts and herbs that support metabolism and agni, even if I need to repeat the same advice twice because patients forget.
Psoriasis cases make me think more carefully, since the skin keeps showing what’s happening inside, and I try to balance cleansing with calming therapies. I get a bit lost in details sometimes, like wondering if a small routine change could ease flare-ups, but that helps me tailor plans better.
With arthritis, whether it’s early stiffness or chronic pain, I use Ayurvedic approaches to reduce inflammation, improve joint mobility and slow the progression. Some days the plan flows smooth, other days I rework it midway, but the aim stays same—to bring steady relief and make movement easier without overwhelming the body.
I like combining practical guidance with simple lifestyle edits, even if I add extra commas or mispell something while typing fast lol. Each specialty area keeps teaching me how interconnected digestion, immunity and inflammation really are, and I try to hold all of that while supporting the patient gently and honestly. |
Achievements: | I am often told that I provide the best treatment in my clinic, and honestly I still feel a little odd saying it myself, but it matters because it came from patients who got real relief. I focus on listening first, sometimes too long, but that helps me catch small details that guide the whole plan. This recognition, even if informal, reminds me to keep refining herbs, diet tips, and therapy choices, even when I make tiny typos or miss a full stop here or there. My main acheivement stays the same—patients feeling better. |
I am working in the field from around 2 years now, and sometimes it feels short and long at the same time, but I keep realising how much I learn from every single patient who walks in. I try to use these two years to build a steady grounding in Ayurvedic practice, focusing on understanding the root-cause of health issues rather than just chasing symptoms. I might still be polishing many things, but my approach toward listening carefully and planning treatment slowly-slowly got better. I am handling diferent types of cases, some simple digestion troubles to more tangled lifestyle-related issues, and I keep noticing how small changes in diet or routine can shift the whole direction of recovery. I like spending time explaining these things to patients, even if I sometimes talk too much or get bit carried away thinking about what else could support their healing. That part of personalised care matters a lot to me, and I am still learning how to balance it with clinical precision. I also try to stay updated with classical Ayurvedic concepts, reading texts again (and again, lol) because every time I find something I missed earlier. My 2-year experience is not huge compared to many seniors, but it taught me discipline, patience, and that no treatment is “one-size-fit-all”. Sometimes I catch myself doubting a step and then rechecking the plan, but I feel that’s part of becoming better. I aim to integrate practical diagnosis with sustainable herbs, lifestyle guide, and small behaviour changes that actually fit into someone’s daily life without overwhelming them. Healing, for me, is more like a journey with the patient rather than a fixed formula. And even with my mistakes in between, I genuinely try to build trust and help them feel safe to share what’s going on with their body. I hope to keep growing with every new case, learning slowly, correcting errors, and offering care that is grounded, honest and actually helpful in the long run.