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Dr. Sanjiv Kumar
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Dr. Sanjiv Kumar

Dr. Sanjiv Kumar
Agra MU Clinic
Doctor information
Experience:
3 years
Education:
CH. Charan Singh University
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am someone who honestly can't just look at health in fragments—like, if you come in for skin rashes or gas or joint pain, I can’t *not* look at what else is going on underneath. That’s kinda how I work. I specialise in whole-body balance, not just symptom relief. Most patients I see have something deeper—gut issues that link to skin flares, or stress that’s messing with hormones or sleep or even their digestion. I deal a lot with long-standing problems—chronic fatigue, metabolic sluggishness, body pains that keep moving around, odd skin stuff, PMS, even vague things like “I just don’t feel right”. My focus is always on connecting dots and not rushing into short fixes. I rely on clinical eval first, sure, but then try tracing back—like what pattern’s been running the show underneath all this. I keep treatment real—some herbal support, diet tweaks, but also long-term plans to keep you off meds when possible. Goal’s not perfection, just stable health that lasts.
Achievements:
I am probably most proud when someone who was stuck—like really struggling with digestion, chronic fatigue, or just not feeling right—comes back and say they finally feel normal again. That kinda stuff don’t always show up in lab reports, but you *see* it in their face, their energy, even their voice. For me, the real achievement’s helping ppl get to that turning point, not just treating what's obvious but untangling the root imbalances using ayurvedic tools that actually fit into real life.

I am a general physician still kinda early in my journey—about a year in—but that one year’s honestly felt like way more. Being on ground every day, I’ve seen a real mix—flu cases turning out to be dengue, random fevers that don’t go away, patients with acid reflux that’s actually masking diabetes, those things keep you sharp. I handle all sorts: common colds, gut upsets, BP issues, sugar fluctuations, even the mild cardio complaints that look small but need real attention. I’m big on listening properly—like actually hearing out what ppl are trying to say between symptoms. Sometimes it’s not even about the meds, it’s about someone feeling safe to ask if their headache’s from tension or BP or just skipped meals. I try and piece things together without rushing. And yeah, I care about prevention—not just cure. I often find myself explaining basics: how to eat cleaner, why water matters, what that afternoon slump may mean, even hygiene stuff when it's needed (which—trust me—is often). I like staying updated too—not just textbooks but newer patterns we see with lifestyle illnesses. I don't jump to conclusions fast but also don't over-complicate things either. That balance I’m still working on. And every case, even if it’s “just a cold,” teaches me smthng—how ppl cope, how small things become big if ignored, and how trust builds over time. I honestly want patients to leave feeling like ok, they were understood, not just prescribed. That’s how I’d want it too if I were on the other side of the table.