Dr. Ishu Bedi
Experience: | 11 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi Post Graduate Ayurvedic College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly seeing general OPD cases these days—kind of a mix of everything honestly, from seasonal stuff to chronic digestion or pain issues that just won't leave people alone. But yeah, over time I leaned more into specific areas too. I did certified trainings in Ayurvedic Cardiology, Infertility, and Vajikaran through Natural Wellness—those courses helped me handle cases like irregular cycles, conception troubles, and even things like low libido or fatigue in men where people don't know who to talk to.
I really try to keep my approach centered around the patient’s prakriti & lifestyle, not just the disease tag. Whether it’s helping someone manage high BP without jumping to meds right away, or tweaking routines for better hormone balance—I use classical Ayurvedic therapies, herbs, diet shifts, and just… listening more. Doesn’t mean everything always works fast or smooth, but I stay consistent with the plan unless something truly needs changing. Ayurveda’s not one-size-fits-all. It’s about reading in between symptoms too. |
Achievements: | I am not someone with awards or big recognitions honestly, but that’s okay. What matters to me more is the trust patients show up with. Over the years, just being able to help people feel better using Ayurved—especially in tough cases like infertility or long-term gut issues—feels like a quiet kind of achievement. I did work hard to finish certified courses in Vajikaran, Cardiology n Infertility... not fancy stuff, but real useful. That kind of learning sticks with you every day. |
I am currently practicing at Patanjali Arogya Kendra, Nadaun—been here for a couple years now. Before this, I spent almost 6 years (5 yrs and 11 months to be exact) at Bharaj Life Care & Trauma Centre Hospital in Punjab. That place was more multi-specialty, and yeah, it shaped a lot of how I deal with real-life chronic cases. Working in two totally different setups—one heavily Ayurveda-focused, the other more hospital-like with allopathy around—sort of made my approach more flexible but still grounded in Ayurved. I mostly treat people dealing with long-standing pain issues, digestive imbalance, lifestyle-triggered disorders (which are like, everywhere these days), plus general complaints that just don’t go away no matter what tests say. My strength I feel, is in figuring the *why* behind the symptoms — whether it’s stress messing up digestion or repetitive strain behind some knee pain that looks like arthritis but isn't really that. And then I build a treatment path with that in mind — using classical Ayurvedic meds, Panchakarma where it fits, diet adjustments, and sometimes even just clearing up confusion the patient has about their condition. I’m pretty comfortable working across a wide spectrum — from gouty arthritis or IBS to mild scalp flareups or weird fatigue that doesn’t get picked up in blood tests. The goal isn’t just symptom relief, it’s about long-term correction, which means patience (from both sides tbh). I always try keeping my care plan tuned to the prakriti (body type), age, season, stress load — small things that change everything. Every patient feels different, and honestly, that’s what keeps this whole practice alive for me. Ayurveda’s not quick-fix medicine, but if you match the method right, healing actually sticks.