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Dr. Saurabh Dole
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Dr. Saurabh Dole

Dr. Saurabh Dole
Clinic Head madhavbuag yavatmal Consultant at dole arogyadham chikitsalaya CEO DOLE AMRUTALAYA Mahavir nagar Part Behind TVS showroom Danwha rood Yavatmal
Doctor information
Experience:
4 years
Education:
Maharashtra University Of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda
Area of specialization:
I am mostly into treating diabetes—like real-world prameha patients who come with all sorts of sugar-level chaos, meds piling up, confused diets, and don’t know what to do next. My focus is on diabetic reversal, not just sugar control. Reversal doesn't mean magic or shortcuts... it’s more like resetting how the body responds to food, stress, daily rhythm etc using Ayurvedic principles that actually make sense when applied right. I work with type 2 diabetic cases mostly, many of them newly diagnosed or stuck at that scary pre-diabetic stage where things still can be changed. I try not to just dump gyaan on them, but actually help them make small shifts—like which dravya suits their prakruti, how to manage meda dhatu, what ahar-vihar mess is making them worse, that sort of thing. It's slow—honestly frustrating sometimes—but when someone's HbA1c drops without harsh meds... that hits different. Ayurveda gives us this deep model of prameha that doesn't just label you as diabetic. It talks about types, dosha involvement, sthula or krusha, urine quality... all that. I mix that with modern stuff—reports, glucose monitoring, etc—to see what’s actually happening inside. And yeah, patients often need repeated followups because the mind resists change even more than the body does. It’s not just diet charts and yoga plans either—sometimes it’s just hearing them out. Many people don’t get that. Reversal’s not one plan fits all. I go case by case, even if that means reworking protocol a dozen times. And when someone who thought they’d be on meds forever suddenly starts needing less... that's worth all the trial-error.
Achievements:
I am someone who kind of just stayed in my lane—did the work, stayed focused—and somehow it all added up. Got the Ayush Ratna Award, which still feels big to say out loud, not gonna lie. I was also the Hirlekar Award boys topper for 4 years straight, which yeah, surprised me too every time the result came. Guess consistency pays off, even when ur doubting urself. Also got the Junior JCI Award early on, back when I was still figuring out how I wanted to show up—not just academically but as a person. That one felt more personal, like hey, maybe I’m on the right path.

I am Dr. Saurabh Sudhakar Dole — a BAMS graduate and currently pursuing my MD in Dravyaguna from Sri Shivayogeeshwar Rural Ayurvedic Medical College, Inchal, Karnataka. If I had to sum myself up in one line, maybe I'd just say I care—deeply—about how lifestyle choices shape health and how Ayurveda, with all its layers, can help people make sense of their bodies again. That’s kinda what pushed me towards this field in the first place and why I’ve stuck with it through all the madness of duty hours and council meetings and late-night herbs-n-Pharmacognosy notes. I studied at Vidharbha Ayurvedic Medical College, Amravati, where apart from my coursework, I was also involved with student leadership. I was general secratory (I knw the spelling’s weird, but that’s how it was printed 😂) of our college council in 2020, and before that, the 10th-grade NMA divisional organiser during school. Then there was AIMA Maharashtra state work and leading the JCI youth wing... and somewhere in there, I co-ordinated Jignyasa in 2021. Stuff like this just kinda shaped how I deal with team dynamics, planning camps, or leading awareness drives now. On the clinical side, I worked 4 years at Madhavbaug clinic, Yavatmal as clinic head—focused mostly on lifestyle disorders, cardiac wellness, and patient counselling. Before that, I spent 3 years as RMO at Sarda Hospital Amravati. Oh and also 3 months with Durvankur COVID hospital during the peak phase, then a brief stint at Irwin District Hospital. All this gave me a real look at how different systems work... and how people respond when you talk to them like actual human beings, not just cases or files. Skill-wise? I’d say observation comes first—I’m always lowkey watching things, people, symptoms. Decision making’s next, then maybe multitasking and trying to explain things without getting too technical (still working on that last part). Right now my focus is solid on Dravyaguna—understanding drug properties from both shastra and science lens. My career goal is to genuinely contribute to Madhavbaug's mission and help make research-backed Ayurveda more mainstream... less preachy, more practical, more real.