Dr. Sruthi Wilson
Experience: | 7 years |
Education: | Ahalia Ayurveda Medical College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly treating women’s health concerns n general medicine kinda side by side now, since both keep overlapping anyway. In gynae I see a lot of PCOD, period issues—too early, too late, heavy flow, cramps that knock ppl out—then also infertility stuff, or perimenopause things where hormones go all over the place. I go with herbal meds first but also use Panchakarma when needed, esp in stubborn PCOD or if ama’s involved. But not every case need intense detox, sometimes just correcting routine n food helps big.
Then in general OPD I get tons of digestive cases—acidity, constipation, bloating, IBS—and also ppl who don’t say “I’m stressed” but their body shows it. Like anxiety or burnout showing up as sleep loss, gut issues, hair fall etc. I try not to just chase the symptoms, I check deeper where the imbalance is starting from. Most treatments I plan around their prakriti n stage of life—no one-size formula works here. I just try to be practical and real with what their body can actually handle right now. |
Achievements: | I am also someone who studied Psychology (B.Sc.) along with Ayurveda, which honestly helps more than ppl think—like when someone talks about stress, grief, self-doubt, or just... doesn't say anything clearly but their body shows it. That background kinda tunes me into that layer faster. I also did a cert course in Food & Nutrition, which I use a lot in day-to-day planning—not just Pathya but like real, workable diet tweaks too. |
I am working full-time in Ayurveda now, over 2.5 years actually, and each setup I’ve been in taught me something diff. At Kandamkulathy Ayurveda Hospital, I was hands-on with chronic cases—arthritis, skin conditions, migraines etc—plus we did a lot of Panchakarma, which helped me see how detox isn’t just about clearing waste, but also how timing n constitution matter a *lot*. That whole setting was more classical—good learning ground. Then at Santhigiri Clinic, I shifted into more OPD-style rhythm. There, the cases were often lifestyle-linked—PCOD, thyroid, back pain, diabetes—and what I noticed is ppl usually come in tired of trial-n-error. That made me focus more on pratyaksha (observation), understanding dosha shifts over time and planning treatments that didn’t just “feel good” short-term. Also did a bit more with women’s health there—painful periods, fibroids, that kind of thing—helped me get better at gentle, non-invasive support. Most recently at Brahmahlife Wellness Center, the vibe was more integrative. We weren’t just treating disease, but helping ppl shift their whole lifestyle. I'd work with herbs, yes, but also add yoga advice, stress tools, diet tuning... even simple dinacharya tweaks. That place really reinforced my belief that healing is more than just “curing”. It’s about making space for sustainable change—without overwhelm. Through all this, I try not to rush care. I actually ask ppl abt sleep, emotions, daily food—not just their symptoms—bc that gives the whole picture. My focus stays rooted in classical Ayurveda, but I adjust it to today’s ppl—their pace, their diet, their stress levels. I feel like each pt teaches me more abt applying Ayurveda with both precision and patience. That’s what I want to keep doing.