Dr. Sanjivani Bansode
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Maharashtra University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with Panchakarma—like, proper classical stuff. Not spa detoxes or diluted versions but full-fledged procedures like Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya & Raktamokshan... all done only when it *actually* makes sense for that patient’s Prakriti, season, and current state. As an MD in Panchakarma, I kinda got wired to think in doshic logic first, but I always factor in real-world stressors too—poor sleep, erratic meals, sitting jobs, all that modern clutter. My strength is customizing protocols, whether someone’s stuck in a chronic metabolic loop or dealing with stress + fatigue layers. Deep cleansing is only one piece though—rebuilding dhatus, regulating digestion, and guiding post-panchakarma recovery with right ahara, yoga and herbs, that’s where long-term results show up. I care less about quick-fix symptom relief and more about how sattva & ojas can be rebuilt slowly. It takes time... but it works if you stick with it. |
Achievements: | I am super drawn to clinical research when it’s rooted in actual Ayurvedic logic—not just stats. I wrote a published piece on sthoulya that dug into diet-based interventions… food’s powerful when used right, you kno? My PG thesis was an open-arm clinical study on Pippalyadi Avapida Nasya for Kaphaja Pratishaya—honestly didn’t expect how much that work would shape my whole approach. Tracking outcomes, documenting shifts, connecting classics to real cases—that’s where I felt Ayurveda breathe different. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who spent 3 years at Sukhayu General Clinic from 2021 to 2024—real everyday clinical work, not just theory. I handled a wide range of patients there, people walking in with joint pain, fatigue, PCOS, gas issues, thyroid swings, insomnia, that kind of thing. A lot of chronic stuff, yes, but also acute cases—fevers, digestion crashes, skin flares. What I tried to do each time was not just hand them churnas & lehyams and send them off. I always started with *why* this imbalance showed up—food habits, sleep, mental stress, wrong seasonal behavior—then tailored therapy based on that. Panchakarma, if needed. Otherwise, well-chosen herbs + daily routine fixes actually go a long way. During that period I really built a habit of listening carefully—because the pattern is often hidden behind 3–4 scattered complaints, you just gotta connect it. And ya, I always aligned classical Ayurvedic logic with a bit of modern diagnostic awareness—CBC, TSH, USG, lipid profiles, those tools help confirm or fine-tune what I suspect. My focus was mostly on metabolic & lifestyle disorders, musculoskeletal pains, gut & general wellness... like digestion to immunity, everything that felt “off” to the patient but wasn't always clearly diagnosed elsewhere. After that, from Nov 2024 to Feb 2025, I got a short research stint with Research Ayu—totally diff space. Less patient load but more thinking. I worked on documentation, reviewing how our classical therapies actually hold up against data—like, do they *show up* in charts? How do we track subtle shifts Ayurveda talks about in modern formats? That made me rethink a few things too… like how evidence-based Ayurveda doesn't have to mean watered-down or overly clinical. It just means clear understanding of results. My core remains the same tho—helping patients reach a better state of balance, without drowning in supplements or procedures. Just honest care, rooted in Ayurvedic science, adjusted to this fast, changing world.