Dr. Deepak Saini
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | PT. Deendayal Upadhyay Memorial Health Sciences And Ayush University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly drawn toward clinical ayurveda management, and somedays I feel like I’m still figuring new layers in it even after doing it again n again. I try to focus on how a patient’s dosha imbalance shows up in small ways, not just the big symptoms they tell first, and sometimes I catch myself rethinking a plan halfway because the body responds diffreently than I expected.
I work around making treatment more practical—diet correction, simple routines, classical formulations, panchakarma when needed—nothing too showy but straight to what fits that person’s prakriti. A lot of clinical work is about connecting dots: why digestion is off, why a skin issue keeps coming back, why a joint pain flare looks unrelated but actually isn’t. I like going deep into those patterns, even if it takes extra minutes or a small pause to reassess.
Managing chronic issues and day-to-day conditions through ayurvedic principles feels natural to me now, though I still get those “wait let me check again” moments. My goal is to create plans that are sustainable and understandable, not overloaded with jargon. In short, I keep my approach flexible but grounded in classical clinical ayurveda, letting the treatment shift as the patient’s response shifts too, even if the process gets a bit messy on some days. |
Achievements: | I am glad that I got the chance to work with more than 500 patients till now, and sometimes I still get surprisd how each case teaches me something small but useful. I try to handle every person with proper clinical ayurveda logic, even when the situation is a bit rushed or the symptoms don’t match neatly. Many of these treatments turned out well, maybe because I keep adjusting things and not sticking rigidly, and that feels like a quiet but meaningful achievemnt for me. |
I am trying to put into words what these 6 months + 6 months of internship actually gave me, and honestly it feels more than what fits in some neat line. I spent half a year in the Govt Ayurveda Hospital, learning how real patients don’t alwys match the textbook patterns, and how you have to listen carefully before jumping into some diagnosis. Sometimes I’d stand there rechecking a nadi reading or wondering if I missed a tiny clue, but that confusion also made me sharper with each passing day. Then another 6 months in the District Hospital Bilaspur, where the pace was a bit faster, and I had to adjust quick. Working between departments showed me how ayurveda and general medical practics can stay side-by-side without any conflict, just complimenting each other when handled properly. There were moments where I caught myself feeling unsure, but after a few cases you start to trust your hand and your judgement more. These internships also got me used to patient communication, paperwork, casual chaos of OPD mornings, sudden changes and few mistakes you learn not to repeat again. It’s funny how a small correction by a senior doctor can stick with you for months. Now when I look back, I feel those one year of exposure made my foundation stronger than I realised at that time. It wasn’t fancy or dramatic, just steady learning, lots of observing, and getting myself comfortable with both ayurvedic principles and practical hospital protocols. I still carry that mix of discipline+curiosity whenever I meet new patients.