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Dr. Uday Khachar
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Dr. Uday Khachar

Dr. Uday Khachar
Un employed
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Netra Chikitsa Ayurved College Amreli
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am thinking back to those 6 months when I worked in my village, and honestly that time shaped a lot of how I see health and pt care now. I was handling small but complicated issues, like people walking in with long-standing digestion problems, skin rashes they kept ignoring, or joint pains they just lived with because they didn’t know what else to do. Sometimes I felt I was learning more from them than the other way around. I am realising that working in a village setting kind of pushed me to rely on core Ayurvedic principles more deeply, since resources were limited and pts expected simple but strong solutions. It made me focus on practical treatment plans, diet changes that actually fit their daily life, and explaining things in a way people don’t get scared or confused. I am still figuring out which area I want to specialise fully in, but those months taught me to work patiently and understand patterns in health that you don’t always notice elsewhere. Maybe the experience was short, but it gave me enough clarity to keep refining how I support people on their health journey now.
Achievements:
I am thinking that maybe my biggest achievment till now is how I manage to talk with pts in a way they actually feel heard, sometimes more than the treatment itself. I try to give them proper time, explain small things even if they ask twice, and that kind of care make them come back with trust. I am not doing anything extra fancy, just trying to treat them well and keep a calm space. And when pts say they feel better or their family feels relieved, it feels like a small win for me everytime.

I am fresh out of my BAMS and kind of still feeling my way through this big world of Ayurveda, and sometimes I catch myself digging too deep into new modes of therapy that our classical texts mention but we don’t always explore enough in daily practice. I am trying to understand how these concepts actually fit into real pts, real issues, not just theory on paper, and honestly that part excites me more than I thought. I am learning to look at health in a broader frame, seeing how dosha, agni, ama all play out together, and I keep noting small things that make big sense later. Some days I question if I am going too slow or missing something, but then I realise this phase of experimenting, reading, and observing the tiniest changes in people is important too. I am trying to blend these therapies gently into my approach, like testing how certain modalities respond better for digestion troubles or for stress patterns, and I feel like gradually I am shaping my own way of treating. Maybe it sounds a bit messy right now, but I want my practice to be grounded in authenticity and still open to new interpretations within Ayurveda. I am hoping that as I move ahead, these early experiences with new conceptual therapies sort of give me a stronger foundation, and even if the journey is not perfectly straight, I know I am working toward something meaningful for my future patients.