Dr. Arya R S
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Ashwini Ayurvedic Medical College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on Panchakarma — that’s the area where I really feel connected, both clinically and instinctively. Over the years I’ve worked with people dealing with everything from metabolic sluggishness to auto-immune probs, stress burnouts, skin flare-ups, even hormonal messes, all through classic Panchakarma lines. I don’t follow rigid templates though. Every plan I make depends on the patient’s Prakriti, vikriti, lifestyle baggage... and even mental space sometimes.
Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya, Raktamokshana — I’ve used them all, not just textbook-style, but in real messy cases where detox was *needed* not just “nice to have.” Whether it’s gut reset, mind clarity, or immune rebalancing, I focus on what will hold up long term — not just one-week relief.
Panchakarma isn’t just cleanse and relax. It’s deep rewiring when done right.!! That’s what I aim for — to clear the blockages and bring the body back to its own rhythm. |
Achievements: | I am trained in Ayurveda with a core specialization in Rasashastra & Bhaishajya Kalpana — basically the science behind medicine prep & formulations, which I’m kinda obsessed with. During my BAMS, I secured 18th rank in Balaroga and 8th in Research n’ Stats, which surprised me too tbh but also pushed me deeper into evidence-based approaches. I like digging into both clinical roots *and* the numbers behind them. That balance is what shapes how I build each treatment — precise, but still personal.!! |
I am someone who kinda stepped into Ayurveda with a mix of curiosity and a lot of questions — and that honestly hasn’t changed much, except now I’ve got more tools to explore those questions. My journey started at Ashwini Ayurvedic Medical College and Research Centre in Tumkur, where I did my internship and got real hands-on exposure. For that whole year, I worked directly under senior physicians — seeing, learning, making mistakes, figuring out diagnosis patterns, and getting into the actual rhythm of patient care. That foundation — the one you build standing next to the patient, not behind a textbook — really shaped how I think about healing. Right now, I’m working in clinical research at Vidal Health. It’s a different pace but equally important — I’m part of a team that’s building evidence around Ayurvedic and integrative treatments. What I like most about this work is how it connects the dots between ancient concepts and real-world health outcomes. I don’t just want to believe Ayurveda works — I want to prove it in ways the larger healthcare world can understand too. My role involves diving into protocols, data, study models — but also holding on to that classical framework that makes Ayurveda what it is. We're always balancing — the doshas, the science, the data points. I'm especially drawn to chronic illness management and gut health right now — fields where Ayurveda has depth but research can still go much, much further. I’m working toward becoming the kind of physician who can see both sides clearly — the old and the new — and actually use them together to help people heal better. And yeah, that might take time. But I'm ok with slow, as long as it's true.