Dr. Akshaj Rathore
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Pt. Dr. Shivshakti Lal Sharma Ayurved Medical College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working around a bunch of conditions that kind of come again n again in my opd, and over time I started focusing deeper on them. I deal with digestive disorders like Amlapitta, IBS, constipation—sometimes I feel the gut tells half the story even before the patient finish talking. Skin issues too, like eczema, acne, fungal infctions, psoriasis… they behave so weirdly with food or stress that I keep rechecking small details I thought I alredy understood.
Joint and musculoskeletal problems are another area I end up treating a lot, esp arthritis or cervical and lumbar spondylosis where ppl come with long pain histories and I try to break that pattern slowly. And I also manage anorectal disorders, even when patients hesitate a bit at first, I try to keep the space easy so they can share properly.
Maybe my approach looks simple on outside, but I try to connect all these with ayurvedic clinial principles and that helps me give a treatment that actually fits the person, not just the disease name. |
Achievements: | I am kind of proud that my clinical work in ayurvedic medicine keeps moving toward a more holistic way, where I try to see the whole picture not just one symptom. I focus a lot on long-term disease managment, and many patients tell me they feel more stable with the therapies I use. Sometimes I get a bit too detailed, but it helps me keep good pt satisfaction and stay true to authentic ayurveda tratments. |
I am working as an Ayurvedic Physician (BAMS) and most of my days kind of revolve around understanding how classical ayurvedic principles actually play out in real patients, not just in books. Sometimes I feel I look too deeply into small symptoms but it helps me catch things early, esp in acute or chronic diseases where the doshas shift fast and you need to track them carefully. I handle a wide range of conditions—lifestyle disorders like diabetes or obesity patterns, gynecological issues where women come with long-standing troubles that didn’t get proper attention, skin diseases that flare oddly with food or seasons, digestive disorders that go up and down with stress, joint pain that starts mild but bothers a person’s whole routine, and anorectal problems which people hesitate to talk about at first. I try to make them comfortable enough so they can share the details clearly, even when I am not sure if I am asking the question in the best way. Some days I feel my approach is little slow, other days I think taking time is actually the strength of ayurveda—doing proper nadi, agni, and lifestyle assesment rather than rushing. I like connecting everything back to the patient’s ahar-vihar, their small habits that they dont realise are affecting their health. I focus a lot on practical lifestyle correction, because when they actually follow it, the treatment response changes so much that it almost surprises me again and again. I use classical concepts for diagnosis and management, keeping each plan personalised instead of throwing the same remedy everywhere. Whether its chronic skin conditions or digestive imbalance or issues around menses, pcos-type patterns, or joint pain that needs long-term correction, I try to keep things simple but still precise. Maybe my method looks too straightforward sometimes, but it works for patients and that matters more to me than fancy words or heavy protocols. I keep learning with each case, and even on days when I feel unsure about a tiny detail, I remind myself that ayurveda gives enough tools to understand it if I just look a little carefully.