Dr. Drishya T
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Santhigiri Ayurved Medical College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working in areas like infertility, PCOS, PCOD and other hormonal or gynec issues that just don’t get solved with quick fixes. With ayurveda, I try to bring back balance without pushing the body too hard. Some cases come with years of irregular cycles, or unexplained infertility – and I do a mix of herbal meds, panchakarma where needed, and lot of diet-lifestyle tuning. I also see many cases of chronic low back ache, hairfall, fatigue that just lingers for months.. sometimes years.. and each one needs a diff approach. Lately I’ve also been seeing more mental health-related cases – ADHD, anxiety, mood dips – where ayurveda helps gently, esp when patient stick to the plan. Also handle BPH and diabetes management in daily practice, with more focus on long-term stabilty than just sugar numbers. Honestly no two patients are the same and I try to not overgeneralize – the treatments I give are always adjusted to the person, not just their diagnosis. |
Achievements: | I am not into big awards or anything but honestly what matters to me most is when a patient comes back and says "I actually feel better now." That’s what I count as real success. Whether it’s someone who got pregnant after struggling with PCOS for years, or a person who finally slept better after months of anxiety – that kind of feedback sticks. I just keep trying to make sure ppl walk out with more clarity, less pain, and some hope. That’s kinda what I work for every day. |
I am someone who got to learn ayurveda not just from books but right from the treatment rooms of District Ayurveda Hospitals across Ernakulam, Malappuram and few other regions too. During my internship, I worked closely under senior vaidyas, and that hands-on time really made me see how theory translates to real patient care. There were days with heavy OPDs, and I had to manage cases ranging from mild digestive issues to stubborn joint disorders – all of that really shaped how I think as a doctor now. Over the years, I got more comfortable dealing with things like low back ache, knee pain, female infertility, hairfall, lip pigmentation (which is becoming quite common now btw), and also certain mental health situations where ayurveda offers quiet support but people don’t always notice it. My approach is mostly about figuring out what’s actually causing the trouble, not just stopping the symptom. Once I know that, I use whatever is needed – Panchakarma, choorna, herbal lepas, ahara-vihara adjustment – all that in a way that fits the patient’s real life, not something too idealistic they can’t follow. Especially with conditions like infertility or mental unrest, it’s not just physical, right? I try to hold space for that full picture, even if the answers aren’t always immediate. I’ve seen how small lifestyle tweaks done consistently can change outcomes, more than just piling up medicines. One more thing – I don’t believe in a one-size-fits-all cure. Two patients with same diagnosis might need completely opposite line of treatment, and I try to keep that in mind everytime. Ayurveda is wide, but subtle too.. and that’s where real healing can begin if we’re patient with it. Honestly I still learn from every patient who walks in. And I like to keep refining things, because health isn’t static – neither is treatment.