Dr. Anjali Modi
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | KLE Academy of Higher Education and Research |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am someone who’s always kinda drawn toward the messier, chronic stuff—gut issues that keep coming back, hormones that feel off no matter what labs say, or skin flares that just don’t quit. That’s really where I focus. I specialize in Ayurvedic treatment of gastrointestinal problems like IBS, IBD, and GERD… each case is different, right? Some need Panchakarma. Others need simple but consistent diet shifts plus targeted herbs that suit their agni & dosha type—nothing one-size-fits-all.
With endocrine stuff, I work with ppl dealing with diabetes, thyroid imbalances (both hypo and hyper), and sluggish metabolism type patterns. A lot of that needs slow, steady changes—blood sugar control, weight fluctuation, energy levels—all linked to deeper imbalances. I use classical herbal formulations but also bring in lifestyle pacing, meal rhythm etc. It’s about finding what sticks for that person.
Skin cases are tricky—psoriasis, eczema, acne, even non-specific itchiness—so many layers there. Most of what I do here is rooted in detox therapies and gut correction first, then external applications and daily routine clean-up. Just applying a lepa won’t hold long if internal toxins are still doing their thing.
I keep treatment as personal as I can—like real, practical stuff ppl can actually follow. That’s the goal for me: not just symptom control, but helping ppl feel like their body’s not fighting them anymore. |
Achievements: | I am a BAMS grad n officially registered with CCIM, which keeps me grounded in ethical standards and legit Ayurvedic practice. In final year I got a distinction—felt good, not just marks but proof that I actually *got* the concepts. That phase really shaped how I read patients now. Still, books were just the start. I’m big on refining skills thru clinical exp & hands-on work. My care approach kinda blends textbook knowledge with real-world, body-level sense-making, not just dosha talk. |
I am an Ayurvedic physician who kinda found my core focus in chronic issues people carry around—things like long-term gut disorders, weird hormonal shifts, and skin conditions that don’t go away with just creams or pills. I work on finding what’s *behind* all that, like what’s actually throwing the body off balance in the first place. That’s where Ayurveda just makes sense to me—looking at the whole person, not just the label or diagnosis they walk in with. Mostly, I use a combo of Panchakarma therapies (like real detox, not the buzzword stuff), Rasayana plans, and Shamana treatments depending on the stage of the disease and how the patient’s system is reacting. Some ppl respond well to deep Shodhana, others need slower, gentler protocols—it really changes case by case. I'm really into structuring things in a way that feels doable, not overwhelming—especially for gut and endocrine stuff where there's lifestyle and diet factors all tangled up with the symptoms. With gut health, I handle a lot of IBS-type patterns, sluggish digestion, ama-related issues, that whole cluster. Endocrine work I do usually revolves around thyroid, insulin resistance, or irregular cycles—those often connect back to agni issues too, and the way stress messes up everything. Skin complaints are kinda tricky too—eczema, acne, rashes—always deeper than they look. That’s why I usually pair topical herbal support with internal cleansing or Rasayana if needed. I'm constantly trying to deepen my clinical understanding through hands-on cases, advanced Panchakarma training and reading stuff that helps me tie ancient theories with how ppl live today. Like, I know I’m rooted in Ayurveda, but I also wanna stay aware of modern wellness concepts because people live in both worlds now—scrolling screens and talking about doshas in the same breath. My goal? Honestly, it’s to help ppl feel they’re *finally* heard. That their symptoms aren’t just random or lifelong. That healing is possible, if you know where to look and how to listen.