Dr. Mayuri Pawar
Experience: | 8 years |
Education: | Maharashtra University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on general medicine and also gynecology stuff—like I handle all kinds of chronic things (thyroid, acidity, joint pain, sugar probs, fatigue etc) but a big chunk of my work these days is with women’s health issues. Hormonal imbalances are like... everywhere now. Periods not coming on time, mood shifts, too much flow or none at all, PCOD, hair fall. I try to not just treat the symptoms but go behind what's actually not syncing inside.
During pregnancy, I support with diet, herbs (only the ones that're safe of course), and daily routine corrections—like little shifts that actually matter long term. I also deal with fertility support a lot, especially where cycles are off or stress has built up for years.. Ayurveda helps in calming those deeper layers. I don’t use a one-size plan, it’s very tailored per person.
I kinda mix up classical Ayurvedic concepts with modern lifestyle awareness. Not too rigid, but definitely rooted in tradition. Every case is different, I just try to meet it where it’s at. |
Achievements: | I am holding a CGO certificate, which kinda deepened my work in women’s care—like I now feel more confident while handling period troubles, prenatal guidance, fertility blocks, that sort of thing. It helped me sharpen my clinical side but still keep the Ayurvedic touch intact. Whether it's hormone shifts or postnatal healing stuff, I try to mix safe herbs, diet and routines that fit her body—not just what texts say. I still study constantly, nothing stays fixed too long in real practice. |
I am working in Ayurveda for around 3 years now—not a long time maybe, but it’s been intense. I started off with a real focus on root-cause healing, not just short-term relief, and that's kinda still the core of how I treat. Most of the ppl I see come with chronic issues—metabolic disorders, gut problems, PCOD, thyroid imbalances, sluggish digestion, fatigue, weight gain that doesn’t move even after diet attempts. I don’t look at those as isolated complaints, they’re usually tied in deeper, and that’s where Ayurvedic diagnosis makes so much more sense to me than just labels. I mostly use classical herbs, individualised diet plans and sometimes panchakarma depending on what the patient's body really needs. Some do great with simple changes—just getting the agni right, correcting meal timings, or removing a wrong food combo that’s been messing up the system quietly for years. Others need detox or longer work on dosha balance. It’s a mix—there’s no fixed protocol I rely on, everything’s customized. I’ve worked a lot with women facing cycle issues, heavy bleeding, hormonal acne, bloating during periods, and anxiety-type symptoms that overlap with these. I kinda feel like that area doesn’t get enough attention in regular setups. Also, patients with prediabetes or insulin resistance—I guide them on natural sugar-balancing methods. Slow but works. I keep learning constantly, like actually revising texts + attending seminars, testing stuff carefully before adding into my practice. I want to stay authentic to Ayurveda but also realistic to what people go through today. This is my way to offer care that sticks—not surface-level, but sustainable over time.