Dr. Meenakshi Singh
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Yerala Medical College |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working in Ayurvedic gynac stuff — fertility, periods that act up for no reason, sudden weight gain, PCOD-type mess, hormones going all over the place, all that. A lot of my focus is on infertility (female mostly, but male cases too sometimes) and honestly, every case needs diff approach. Some need full Panchakarma reset, some just need a shift in food/sleep/stress patterns. I do Garbhsanskar sessions too — more ppl are open to it now which is nice, not just during preg but even before conception.
I handle ANC-PNC care also, pretty hands-on with that, like tracking diet, emotional state, Garbhini Paricharya, and even small things like leg cramps or sleep disruption during preg. Modern tools are also part of my routine — like HSG when needed, or copper-T placement for spacing. It’s not just herbs and oil, right? it’s about knowing when to blend things for better outcomes.
Counseling is a big part — honestly, half the time patients just need someone to *listen properly* and not dismiss what they’re saying. I try to give that space while working on diet, gut, sleep, and sometimes detox if it fits the case. All this really aims to balance the full reproductive system, not just stop symptoms for a month. |
Achievements: | I am mostly working on PCOD and infertility these days — kinda just... drawn to it i guess?? I’ve seen how exhausting it gets for patients, like trying everythng but nothing clicks. Through Ayurveda protocols, esp hormone-balancing chikitsa, I’ve managed to help many women ovulate properly again & even get preg naturally, which is huge. It's slow work, sometimes frustating ngl, but watching that shift in their body, their mood, is def one of the things I'm most proud of till now. |
I am a practicing Ayurvedic consultant with 4+ yrs into running my own clinic—honestly, that place’s kinda like my second home now. I work one-on-one with patients, listening closely (sometimes over chai, not kidding) and figuring out *why* their health is off track, not just *what* hurts. Every treatment I suggest is based on classical Ayurvedic texts, but I tweak it to match their prakriti, lifestyle chaos, even their food likes (yes, diet plays a role every single time). No cookie-cutter stuff. Right now, I’m also working as an OBGY registrar at CritiCare Multispeciality Hospital—and trust me, that blend of Ayurveda and hardcore hospital duty? super eye-opening. I get to apply my Ayurvedic skills while staying sharp on clinical protocols, emergency handling, all that. Especially in women’s health—things like PCOD, painful periods, infertility workups, and prenatal routines—I kinda see both sides of the picture. One rooted in herbs and doshas, the other in scans and labs. It helps me balance both, like when modern meds help fast but the root cause? That’s where Ayurveda steps in. I’m big on preventive care too, but that’s not everyone’s cup of tea, right? Most folks come when it gets bad. That’s okay—I still aim to guide them with honest opinions, ethical meds, and no false hope talk. I also believe half of healing comes from being heard. I mean, many times patients just want someone to *get* what they're saying, without brushing it off. That’s where I try to slow down, ask better questions, and work *with* them, not just *on* them. Whether it’s stress messing with periods, or someone tired of trying every cream for hormonal acne, I try to dig deep. Herbs, counseling, detox, diet—all in. And yeah, sometimes it's messy, doesn't work instantly, and needs plan B... but we keep going. That trust, that space where they feel okay to ask anything—that's what I keep aiming for. Healing's not always a straight line.