Dr. Mitalee Bhiva Aynodkar
Experience: | 8 years |
Education: | Maharasthra University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am a general ayurvedic practitioner, and tbh I don’t like to narrow things too much—coz most ppl don’t show up with one clean, clear-cut problem. Someone comes for acidity, and turns out it’s tied to stress + erratic eating + sleep gone off-track. Another person’s knee pain isn’t *just* about joints—it’s vata imbalance, maybe even old trauma stored up. I usually deal with digestion, seasonal flus, skin flare-ups, women’s health stuff, backaches, you name it. I don’t just look at the symptoms—I try to get into daily habits, what triggers imbalances, which dosha’s running wild. My work’s about calming that down with classical ayurvedic meds, some lifestyle tuning, and honestly, just helping ppl learn how to listen to their body again. I keep it real—not everyone needs a full panchakarma right away. Sometimes a small change in diet + a right combo of herbs can shift things more than ppl expect. And yes—immunity building is always in the back of my head when treating anything. |
Achievements: | I am a BAMS grad—finished my degree with a solid grip on Ayurvedic principles, yeah the real deal, not just textbook stuff. Like learning how to read pulse n' prakriti, how different herbs work in combo, even when ppl think they’ve “tried everything.” That training honestly shaped how I approach things now\... I don’t just throw meds, I try to figure out where the imbalance is *actually* coming from. Studying Ayurveda kinda rewired how I see health, not just disease managment but actual healing. |
I am someone who’s worked deep into the govt setup—6+ years across clinics, villages, OPDs, night shifts, you name it. For most of that time—5 years—I was posted as a Community Health Officer at a sub-centre under the health dept. It wasn’t just a desk job. I handled everything from fever, wounds, back pain, antenatal visits, to explaining why a tetanus shot actually matters. We had to reach folks who’d never stepped inside a hospital—mothers with anaemia, underweight babies, families managing diabetes without any real idea what sugar levels meant. That grassroots exposure shaped a lot of how I see medicine—practical, preventive, and very very human. After that I worked a year as a Medical Officer at a PHC, which felt like the next level. I managed OPDs, emergencies (yes, middle-of-the-night ones too), immunization rounds, high BP patients who had no clue they were hypertensive till a random screening showed it. You learn to act fast but also slow down when someone needs to be heard. I dealt with govt protocols, medicine stock-outs, and still tried to make sure ppl didn’t feel like just another file in the register. That’s why now—wherever I practice—I like combining clinical protocols with a more rooted, ayurveda-guided view. Especially for chronic stuff, lifestyle issues, pain conditions that don’t budge with just pills. My goal’s always been clear: keep it accessible, keep it grounded, and make ppl feel they’re *being treated*, not just processed.