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Dr. Chandana
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Dr. Chandana

Dr. Chandana
Vijayawada Andhra pradesh
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
Dr. YSR University of Health and Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly drawn toward Ayurveda’s way of *seeing* the whole person, not just their complaint. Like, the symptoms matter—but behind that, there’s often a bigger imbalance that needs real attention. I work a lot on restoring agni (digestion), calming excess doshas (especially vata-pitta types), and figuring out where the root of the issue even started—wrong diet? stress? seasonal shifts?? Usually it's a mix. I treat a bunch of chronic and lifestyle conditions—gut issues, fatigue, skin flares, hormonal swings—each case has its own pattern if you look close. My main method is combining classical Ayurvedic therapies with doable daily tweaks... like small herbal supports, some lifestyle shifts, and maybe a rasayana here or there if needed. I try to keep it real—not overdo the panchakarma unless it’s clearly needed. Long-term balance is the goal. Patients come in feeling a little stuck and I try to just *listen* first... figure the prakriti, check for ama, see where their routine’s slipping. Not always easy, but deeply worth it when things start shifting.
Achievements:
I am doing my MS in Prasuti & Stree Roga right now, and honestly it’s really opened up how I see women’s health—not just periods or pregnancy, but the full arc from teens to menopause. This training lets me go deeper into Ayurvedic gynecology stuff like menstrual pain, fertility issues, and all kinds of cycle-related imbalances. I’m learning to manage these using classical Ayurvedic tools—herbs, diet, panchakarma when needed—and yeah, it’s making me think more wholistically than ever.

I am currently doing my MS in Prasuti and Striroga from a govt. Ayurvedic college—honestly it’s intense but also really rewarding. This stream covers Ayurvedic obstetrics & gynecology, and day by day I'm getting to see how deep and layered women's health can be when you really start looking at it from both classical texts and practical cases. From teenage hormonal shifts to pregnancy care, postnatal healing, even menopause stuff—I'm trying to study it all with care, not just academically but with real curiosity about how these changes show up in day-to-day life. In the clinic setup, I’ve been working with a good range of cases: PCOD, menstrual issues, infertility, white discharge, even some fibroid and endometriosis cases here n there. Most of the time, I try to look beyond just symptoms—like okay, pain is there, but why? Is it the agni, is the dosha stuck, or maybe the lifestyle is pushing vata too much... Each woman brings her own story, and I really try not to jump into ready-made plans. I also lean a lot on Prakriti analysis and basic diet recall—it gives me a clearer idea of what to tweak. Detox (like shodhana therapies), hormone-balancing herbs, and rasayana plans are things I reach for often, but I also love creating small daily routines for patients that they actually *do*. Fancy therapies mean nothing if it overwhelms the person, right? Apart from clinicals, I do attend seminars, case meets n discussions regularly. I like staying in the loop—both to keep learning and to see what others are noticing in tough cases. I’ve also joined some local community sessions recently around menstrual awareness and it felt grounding, honestly. Still learning every day. But yeah—I try to bring sincerity and softness both into my work, even when the case feels complicated or slow-moving. Ayurveda really gives space for both science and patience.