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Dr. Vinod Kumar
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Dr. Vinod Kumar

Dr. Vinod Kumar
Kamlesh Devi Ayurvedic Chikitsalaya
Doctor information
Experience:
3 years
Education:
Guru Nanak Ayurvedic Hospital and College
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am working mainly as a Nadi Vaidya, and honestly sometimes I still pause for a sec while feeling the pulse, making sure I’m catching those tiny shifts in vata-pitta-kapha that guide the whole diagnosis. My focus is on traditional nadi pariksha, using the pulse to understand deeper imbalances, chronic patterns, even subtle changes in agni or dhatu strength. I am trying to read the pulse not just as numbers or speed but as a kind of conversation the body is having, and I listen to it with a mix of attention and a bit of doubt too—like did I feel that right or should I check again. That rechecking helps me match the patient’s prakriti and vikriti more clearly, even if it makes my notes slightly messy here n there. My speciality is using pulse-based assessment to guide completely personalized Ayurvedic plans, focusing on digestion correction, stress-related issues, metabolic imbalance, energy drops, and many other day-to-day problems people bring. Sometimes I go back to the pulse mid-consult just to confirm a small thing, because the nadi often gives clues before symptoms show fully. I am still refining this craft, adjusting my pace, and letting the pulse guide the treatment approach in a way that feels both classical and very human, even when my wording slips or commas go missing.
Achievements:
I am kind of feeling grateful when I think about my small achievments, because many patients I treated with care are now living more peacefully with their families, and that makes me smile even if I don’t say it out loud much. I am not chasing big awards, just trying to stay steady with each case, and seeing them happier later gives me this quiet confidence. Sometimes I wonder if I did enough, but their messages n small thanks sort of tell me I did something right.

I am working mainly as a Nadi Vaidya, and sometimes I still get a bit lost trying to explain what that really means in short words, because pulse reading kind of feels deeper than what fits in a simple line. When I sit with a patient and place my fingers on the nadi, I try to sense those small shifts in vata pitta kapha that tell me where their system is going out of track… sometimes I re-check it twice just to be sure I’m not missing a tiny variation, even if it makes me look a bit slow in the moment. I am also involved in Ayurvedic medicine preparation and formulations, which is something I enjoy almost too much — mixing the dravya, adjusting the proportions, watching how the balance changes by a small tweak. At times I get distracted thinking if I should try a slightly diff herb profile, but I always stay inside the classical guidelines, just making sure the formulation really matches the patient’s prakriti and their current avastha. Some days my notes get messy and I forget a comma here or there, but the process of crafting a remedy still feels very precise to me. I focus on making medicines that support digestion, metabolism, tissue strength, things like that, because a good formulation can shift a person’s health more gently than people expect. And when I match the nadi reading with a right formulation, the results turn clearer, at least in my expereince. I am trying to grow this work slowly, understanding more about how each patient responds, and adjusting my approach without rushing. Even when doubts pop in my head—like did I judge the pulse too quickly or should I re-evaluate the formulation—I take it as part of learning. Being a Nadi Vaidya with hands-on practice in Ayurvedic preparations feels like a path that keeps opening new layers for me, and I want to keep refining it, even if my thoughts wander or my typing looks a bit off now and then.