Dr. Shreya Tiwari
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Sri Sai Institute of Ayurvedic Research and Medicine |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly focused on managing disease in a permanent and root-level way, not just short term relief, and this idea guides most of my clinical thinking. My primary areas of interest are skin diseases, rheumatology, and digestive disorders, where I try to apply Ayurvedic principles in a very individualized manner.
I work a lot with chronic skin conditions, joint and musculoskeletal problems, and long standing digestive issues, and I keep noticing how deeply these are linked to lifestyle and internal imbalance. Sometimes the patterns are clear, sometimes they are confusing, but that challenge keeps me involved. I prefer taking time with case analysis, understanding dosha involvement, and planning treatment that patients can actually follow.
My approach leans toward sustainable healing, even if progress feels slow at first. I aim to explain things simply, though I do overthink details at times. Managing chronic illness needs patience, consistency, and trust, and I am still learning how to balance all three properly!!. I focus on care that feels practical, ethical, and honest, even when outcomes are not imediately visible. |
Achievements: | I am proud of completing my internship training at a Community Health Centre, where I was exposed to real-world clinical practice and patient management in a busy public healthcare setup. That period pushed my clinical judgement and decision making in ways I did not expect, and some days were intense. I have also qualified the postgraduate entrance examination, which marked an important step toward advanced training, even though the preparation phase felt messy and uncertain at times!! |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with a focused interest in Kayachikitsa, the core branch of Ayurvedic internal medicine, and I am currently pursuing my MD in this speciality. My academic journey and clinical exposure has shaped how I look at disease, recovery, and long term health, sometimes I still question if I am learning fast enough, but the process matters. I have completed one full year of internship where I worked closely with patients across OPD and IPD settings, gaining hands-on understanding of classical Ayurvedic diagnosis and treatment planning. After that, I worked for one year as a duty doctor, managing day-to-day clinical responsibilities, emergency triage, and routine patient care. That phase taught me discipline, patience, and how unpredictable real clinical practice can be, even when textbooks say otherwise. At present, during my MD in Kayachikitsa, I am deepening my knowledge of chronic disorders, lifestyle diseases, and systemic conditions through Ayurvedic principles. I deal with case analysis, samprapti understanding, and individualized chikitsa plans, though some days the learning curve feels steep. My approach leans toward understanding the root cause rather than quick symptom control, which takes time and trust. I believe in clear communication with patients, even when answers are not instant or perfect. I try to balance classical Ayurvedic wisdom with practical clinical judgement, and I am still refining that balance tbh. Accuracy in diagnosis, consistency in follow-up, and realistic expectations are things I value a lot!! Overall, my experince as an intern, duty doctor, and now postgraduate student has helped me grow steadily, not rapidly. I am committed to ethical Ayurvedic practice, continous learning, and providing care that actually fits the person, not just the disease.