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Dr. Jagveer Singh
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Dr. Jagveer Singh

Dr. Jagveer Singh
Run my Ayurvedic and Ksharsutra Clinic at Fatehpur and Banda
Doctor information
Experience:
11 years
Education:
Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj University
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am into treating gut issues, skin probs n ano-rectal conditions since around 2014... kind of where I started focusing early in my practice, and I’ve just stuck with it bcz these things honestly affect ppl way more than they talk about. At Jiva Ayurveda Clinic, Phool Bagh, Kanpur, where I worked 2 yrs—I got to deal with both routine n tricky cases, esp. with pitta-based complaints like acidity, IBS, eczema or fissure n piles types. That exposure really gave me strong base in Ayurvedic gastro care n skin balance. I like to look at vata-pitta-kapha angles behind all this—how digestion, rasa formation, or apana vayu disturbance might be triggering a long-standing skin rash or bleeding piles. Sometimes ppl don’t even connect their constipation with their skin breakouts, but that’s where Ayurved comes in—you treat the root, not just patching over. And honestly, that’s why I keep coming back to digestion—it’s like, once the agni is fixed, half the other things get better too. Whether it's internal cleansing, gut reset, skin detox or just deep balancing with herbs—I don’t rush into strong meds. I mix things depending on how deep the imbalance is. I’ve worked with those who already tried 4-5 meds n nothing worked, and we had to take it slower, more tailored. Every patient’s prakriti n past matter here—what works for one might worsen other. That’s what I’ve learned from daily practice n real life cases, not just books.
Achievements:
I am always tryn to learn more, like I’ve gone for CME programs in diffrnt ayurved collages all over india—whenever I get time or even in busy opd days if its online, I just jump in. Not always easy but worth it, coz I feel staying updated really matters in Ayurveda also, not just modern med. These sessions helped me sharpen my thinking esp. on how different ppl interpret same dosha patterns—every college, every guru had something unique to offer, n that kinda keeps me grounded too.

I am someone who always starts with naadi pariksha. No matter who comes to me—young, old, chronic case or just some vague symptoms—I try to *feel* the root first. I don’t just look at the current complain, I go back—was it genetic? Acquired? Something infective that changed the path of doshas? Or maybe hidden trauma stuck in the dhatus. I believe the body speaks more than the patient sometime, especially when they don’t know how to explain it. That’s where Dashvidha Pariksha comes in, I use it every single day... not mechanically, but like a conversation. Naadi, prakriti, desh, kaal, ahar, vyayam—it’s like painting a picture of their health history. I don’t believe in rushing to name a disease too quick. First I ask all the past stuff—when did it really begin? Has anyone in your family gone through similar? What worsens it... seasons, food, stress? The aim isn’t to treat the label. I try to see the imbalance behind it, doshik patterns that got disturbed. Even in common disorders like acidity, PCOS, joint pains or skin flare-ups, I first try to check if it’s from inside-out or outside-in, if that makes sense. And sometimes yeah, it surprises people when I ask about their bowel habits or sleep cycles in the very first 5 mins. But those things matter. The pulse tells me one thing, your tongue another, and your eyes... sometimes more than all of it. That’s why I spend time in first visit. Can’t treat blindly, right? Even if someone just wants a quick solution, I still tell them—without knowing your system's base, you’re just pushing symptoms around. Not everyone’s ready for slow healing. But I explain how real Ayurveda takes context—prakriti, past events, even emotional layer. I don’t push only herbs or panchakarma blindly. I mix what’s needed—sometimes minimal meds, more food shifts; other times deep shodhan. My whole thing is to not guess but to *understand*. That’s why I rely on deep questioning and constant observation—not just first day but every follow-up too.