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Dr. Nayan Wale
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Dr. Nayan Wale

Dr. Nayan Wale
Shree Sai Samarth Polyclinic Solpaur
Doctor information
Experience:
5 years
Education:
Shri Kalidas Ayurvedic Medical College and Hospital
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am working as a general physician with focus on Ayurvedic medicine, and my day mostly revolves around seeing patients with common as well as lingering health issues. I handle routine OPD cases, acute fevers, digestion troubles, body pain, allergies, and also chronic conditions where people are tired of quick fixes. My approach stay rooted in core Ayurveda diagnosis, dosha assessment, and practical lifestyle guidance, though sometimes I blend basic general physician judgement too, when needed. I am comfortable managing long-term care plans, explaining medicines slowly, and adjusting treatment as body respond. I believe simple Ayurvedic chikitsa works best when followed properly, even if results feel slow at start. Patient care matter a lot to me, maybe more than speed, and I try to keep things realistic, not overpromise.. Sometimes treatment need patience, even from me, but that’s part of healing i guess.
Achievements:
I am always focused on patients well being, and that feels like biggest achievement to me till now. My work mainly revolve around listening carefully, adjusting treatment slowly, and making sure patient actually feel supported, not rushed. Sometimes results take time, sometimes faster, but long-term balance matter more to me. I try to follow Ayurvedic principles honestly, even when cases feel challenging or progress go uneven.. Patient trust, comfort, and steady improvement keep me motivated, even on days when outcomes feel uncertain or slow!!!

I am working in medical field for total 7 years, out of which around 4 years was in hospital setup and 3 years in clinic practice. Hospital work gave me strong base, long duty hours, different type of cases, emergencies sometimes, and learning under pressure. Clinic work is different, slower but deeper, where I sit with patients, listen more, explain things again n again, and follow them over time. In hospital I handled day to day OPD cases, routine management, and also assisted seniors when things got complicated. That phase shaped my clinical thinking a lot, even now I sometimes catch myself thinking like hospital mode when a case looks serious. Clinic practice on the other hand taught me patience. Patients come with chronic issues, expectations, doubts, sometimes fear, and I had to adjust my approach accordingly. I focus on practical treatment planning, not just diagnosis on paper. Some days I feel I should have more time with each patient, but I try to balance it. My experience across hospital and clinic helps me understand both acute care and long term disease management. I still keep learning everyday, reading, observing patterns, correcting myself when needed, because medicine never stays same for long, and neither should the doctor.