Dr. Dipesh Kushwah
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | MP Medical Science University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with people who’re stuck in these recurring cycles—sexual issues like PE or ED, long-standing skin flareups like psoriasis or eczema, all that chronic joint pain no one takes seriously until it becomes unbearable, or gut mess like acid reflux n bloating. Even migraines — that stubborn, confusing thing where you feel fine and then bang, everything shuts down. My practice’s kind of centered around figuring out what’s throwing their system off, rather than just fixing the latest symptom. I use classical Ayurvedic tools — herbs, Panchakarma, diet shifts, lifestyle nudges (some harder than others tbh) — all tailored to that person's prakriti and vikriti. I don’t chase fast fixes but I do aim for lasting changes, even if that needs patience. And yeah, some days it’s tricky, not every case is textbook-clear, but those are the ones that usually teach you the most. |
Achievements: | I am not really into awards but yeah—getting the Arogya Sansad Achivement Award in 2023 kinda meant a lot. It wasn’t about a single case or flashy result, just a quiet acknowledgment of doing this work everyday... helping people with tough chronic stuff or those odd lifestyle complaints that don’t always show up in labs. Felt good to know my Ayurvedic care approach—genuine, patient-first, a bit slow maybe but deep—is actually making a dent somewhere. |
I am an Ayurvedic physician who’s kinda grown into this path over the last 3+ years of hands-on clinical practice. Most of my work stays focused around sexual health concerns, chronic skin stuff, and gut issues—things that honestly can mess with someone’s everyday life more than they admit. I keep my approach rooted in classical Ayurvedic principles, the kind where you don’t just slap on herbs and hope—they have to match the dosha imbalance, the Prakriti, the whole story. A lot of patients come to me after trying other stuff, especially for things like premature ejaculation, erectile weakness, IBS, acid peptic troubles, or flare-ups of eczema or psoriasis. And somewhere in that journey, they start to see how detoxing the system, not just medicating it, helps. That’s where my training in Panchakarma matters. I work a lot with Virechana for pitta-heavy conditions, and Basti — probably one of the most underrated treatments when it comes to restoring balance, especially in gut-related or vata-linked complaints. I lean into personalized herbal treatments. Not really a fan of generic kits or “one-size-for-all” things. I do take my time with pulse analysis, case history, and figuring out what their system’s been through. Food and lifestyle plays a big role too — and yeah, I talk a lot about digestion during consults, maybe more than people expect. Even with all the therapies, I think the actual healing starts when someone feels heard. That’s something I try not to miss. I want them to feel they’re not alone or being hurried. The goal for me isn’t just symptom relief — it’s that they walk away understanding what’s going wrong inside and how to fix it without crashing into side effects or short fixes. I keep learning... like honestly, each patient teaches me something. And while Ayurveda’s deep and sometimes complex, I do my best to keep things real, relatable and result-oriented. Whether it’s a guy struggling with energy loss or someone exhausted from skin flares, I just try to meet them where they are — and walk from there.