Dr. Jayeeta Das
Experience: | 5 years |
Education: | Institute of Post Graduate Ayurvedic Education and Research at Shyamadas Vaidya Sastra Pith |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on chronic cases where things get stuck — like arthritis that keeps flaring up, skin issues that don’t really respond to creams, or weird energy crashes that aren’t explained by blood reports. My specialization includes Ayurvedic management of musculoskeletal disorders, autoimmune & immune-related stuff, metabolic conditions like diabetes, and neurological imbalances too — vata-driven things, foggy thinking, or even numbness that just won’t go away.
I work through classical Ayurvedic principles — root-cause analysis, not symptom-chasing. Herbal meds, panchakarma (when needed), lifestyle & food tweaks... all planned around that person’s actual prakriti & current imbalance. I don’t push standard protocols, esp when the person’s agni is low or nervous system’s already hyper. I’m drawn to cases where conventional stuff isn’t helping much. Not quick-fix type, but slow, deep, corrective care that actually sticks.!! |
Achievements: | I am always curious about how Ayurvedic concepts hold up when we’re discussing tough or layered health issues — the kind that don’t fit into easy categories. I got to share some of that during 3 national seminars (each one kind of stretched my thinking tbh) and also presented once at an international seminar, where I spoke on Ayurvedic views on complex clinical cases. Those spaces pushed me to link classical ideas with current realities... and reminded me how much I still wanna learn.!! |
I am someone who took their first proper steps in Ayurveda at J.B. Roy State Ayurvedic Medical College & Hospital — yeah, that old, respected one in Kolkata where the buildings smell like history and medicated oil at the same time. That place gave me the base I still stand on. After finishing BAMS and internship, I went on to do a 1.5-year housestaffship in Swastha Vritta. That’s where I really got pulled into the preventive side of Ayurveda — daily routine, seasonal alignment, mental hygiene... it’s way deeper than just “eat light food” kinda advice. Right now I’m pursuing my MD in Panchakarma at Govt Ayurvedic College – Institute of Post Graduate Ayurvedic Education & Research, inside the Shyamadas Vaidya Shastra Pith Hospital. Long name, but real work. Clinical, intense, and constantly throwing me into new layers of disease management. Whether it’s a classic Virechana case for pitta disorder or a confused metabolic cluster where nothing fits neatly, Panchakarma demands that you read *everything* — the doshas, the patient’s rhythm, their past meds, their fears, their digestion, even the way they *sit* and talk. Over time I’ve started focusing more on how to use Panchakarma not just to treat, but to *interrupt* disease before it gets deep. I see chronic cases where the patient has no idea how long they’ve been out of sync, they just know they’re tired, stuck, or sliding slowly into something worse. And Ayurveda, when done right, gives them a way *out.* That’s the part I care about. I like bridging classical wisdom with real-world practicality. Not everything works in textbook order — sometimes you adapt, sometimes you pause. But the core? It’s always there. From diagnostics to treatment to follow-up, I try to stay honest and clear with my patients. I keep learning — from the texts, my teachers, and the patient who didn’t respond the way I thought they would. That humility is part of practice too. For me, Ayurveda isn’t just system-based care — it’s person-based clarity. That’s how I try to work. Every day, every case. One person at a time.