Dr. Mohd Shahid
Experience: | 5 years |
Education: | Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on two areas—Ayurvedic treatment for anorectal disorders and infertility, both male and female. Sounds like different ends of the spectrum right? but over time I’ve seen how both need the same depth of care and personalised thinking. In anorectal issues—piles, fissures, fistula, etc—I use minimally invasive Ayurvedic techniques, like ksharasutra or local lepas. They actually work well if done right, with proper follow-up. Many patients come in after trying creams or surgery already & still in pain… that’s where a more root-cause-based plan matters.
On the infertility side, I see couples stuck in loops of tests, scans, and no clarity. My approach is holistic, grounded in herbs, diet, cycle tracking, and supporting the system. For women, things like PCOS, poor ovulation, thin endometrium show up often. For men—low sperm count, motility issues. These don't fix overnight, but they *can* be corrected. I like working closely over months, tweaking things slowly. No “one-size-fits-all” here… every body reacts different.
It’s slow sometimes, but when it clicks—it’s worth it. |
Achievements: | I am working in clinical practice for over 5 yrs now, mostly with chronic issues & lifestyle-linked complaints—things that don’t just go away with 1 dose or quick fix. During this time I kinda leaned more into classical Ayurvedic diagnosis—nadi, prakriti, ahar-vihar history—it helped me really *see* what’s going on beyond the symptoms. Each patient taught me smthing new, really. This work sharpened my instincts, not just book knowledge. Every case still makes me think, which i honestly like. |
I am a general physician and surgeon—means I’m usually somewhere between diagnosing tricky symptoms and actually stepping in when surgery’s needed. My background is grounded in solid internal medicine. I handle acute stuff like infections or injuries, but also long-term conditions, metabolic things, stuff that needs monitoring. I don’t just hand out meds, I try to *understand* what's going on beneath the surface and where it might be headed if ignored. Surgery? yeah, that’s part of my practice too. Minor procedures mostly—done enough to know that precision isn't just about technique, it’s about timing, safety, and really knowing what that patient needs before & after. It’s not just “cut and done”. Post-op care matters. Even a small mistake in that can set things off balance. I’ve learned to watch the little signs, adjust plans fast, and keep follow-up tight. Whether it’s outpatient visits or emergency work, my aim is usually the same—catch things early, avoid escalation, help the patient feel like someone’s paying attention for real. I work closely with preventive care too. If I can help someone avoid a hospital stay through a few lifestyle corrections or early intervention? That’s honestly a win. I believe in talking straight. My patients should know *why* we’re doing what we’re doing. No vague talk or keeping people in dark. Open conversations help people make the right calls—not just for now but long run too. That’s one thing I always push for: keep them in loop. Medicine keeps shifting—new research, updated guidelines. I do try to keep learning constantly. Not just for the sake of it, but ‘cause protocols change. Techniques improve. I don’t want to be the guy who sticks to old ways just 'cause it's easier. That’s lazy, honestly. In the end I just try to treat the whole person not just the lab reports. And whether someone walks in with a swollen leg, a fluctuating sugar level, or vague chest pain—I take it seriously, every single time.