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Dr. Anil Basera
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Dr. Anil Basera

Dr. Anil Basera
Hisar Haryana
Doctor information
Experience:
6 years
Education:
Punjab Ayurved Medical College And Hospital
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly into the full-body kind of Ayurvedic work — like not just herbs-for-a-headache type of thing but how digestion, sleep, stress, energy levels, immunity all kinda interact with each other. I look at *prakriti* first ‘cause without knowing that, you're just guessing tbh. I use real classical principles to make treatment plans that *fit* the person, not just follow some trend or random chart. Most people who come to me are dealing with joint pain, chronic gut issues, low immunity or just burnout... but honestly it’s rarely just one thing. It’s like this mix — bloating *and* anxiety, tiredness *but* can’t sleep — and that’s where Ayurveda really makes sense if you ask me. I don’t push some detox or shodhan thing on everyone. Sometimes all it needs is better timing of food n rest. I try to keep things practical. No use giving fancy powders if their agni is weak or lifestyle’s all over the place. I work towards long-term healing, like actual *stability* not just relief for a few days. It takes time. But if it clicks, it stays.!!
Achievements:
I am lucky I got to do my first real clinical stretch at National Institute of Ayurveda, Jaipur back in 2019 — a full-on one year posting where you don’t just sit and take notes, you actually see patients walk in with 3 complaints and a 10-year history and somehow expect you to “just fix it” fast. That’s where I started realizing how layered Ayurvedic diagnosis really is. Then in 2020, I was posted in Udaipur for 6 months — smaller setup but honestly sharper learning. Each case made me slow down, re-check my assumptions. Theory hits different when the patient’s sitting infront of you and not in a textbook.

I am a classically trained Ayurvedic physician — studied at the National Institute of Ayurveda, Jaipur (yeah the govt one, NIA), and honestly it was way more intense than I’d thought, both mentally & clinically. It wasn’t just about mugging up shlokas or sitting through lectures. From day one we were in OPDs, IPDs, Panchakarma units… touching actual case files, real patients, full rounds. You couldn’t just guess a dosha and move on. You had to *listen* properly, look at the whole story. What hit me the most during training was how chronic cases—like IBS, fatigue, metabolic stuff, or that nagging back pain people ignore for years—don’t just respond to some basic churnas or yoga lists. These need deep analysis. I started noticing the way doshic disturbances show up quietly, sometimes in digestion, sometimes in mood, or just a weird change in appetite timing. That kinda shaped my style of working. I don't rush into panchakarma unless it’s actually needed. In my current practice, I mix classical herbal formulations with therapies and easy, real-world lifestyle edits — stuff that *fits* into the patient’s life, not overwhelms them. I still refer to the classics like Charaka or Ashtanga Hridaya but also join clinical discussions, research webinars, and new updates from other docs. Sticking blindly to one method doesn’t always work, especially with complex or layered cases. I’m very clear with my patients — I explain the “why” behind what I suggest. Why that medicine, why *no* to that food, why this sleep timing matters. That way they don’t feel lost in the process. This kind of transparent, do-able, yet rooted approach — I kinda owe it to my NIA training. Whether it’s sluggish metabolism or chronic acidity or someone just looking for better energy and balance, I treat with curiosity, structure, and yeah, some gut feeling too (not always perfect lol, but mostly on point). Ayurveda’s not slow. Not if it’s used *properly.* That’s really what I try to bring to my patients. Nothing fancy, just real Ayurveda done right.