Dr. Seema Mane
Experience: | 21 years |
Education: | Ganga Education Society's Ayurvedic Medical College, Kolhapur |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | ChatGPT said:
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who mostly works on things like Asthisandhi Vyadhi (joint n bone probs), infertility cases, diabetes, hypertension, and yeah—Saundarya Chikitsa too, which is like Ayurvedic beauty care but goes much deeper than what ppl usually think. My treatment style? It’s always root-cause based. I don’t really believe in quick patches or just “symptom fixing”. I kinda need to know why the body is behaving a certain way before I decide what to do next.
Joint pain—whether it’s arthritis or chronic back stiffness or just those unexplained knee aches—usually needs more than a balm. I work with Panchakarma plans, medicated oils, and small diet tweaks to slowly rebuild strength and reduce vata aggravation. Same when it comes to infertility—I focus a lot on detox (proper shodhana), hormone balancing with herbs, and bringing the body back to a conception-ready state. That’s not just for women btw, men’s cases are equally important here.
Managing diabetes and BP is all about consistency... and mindset, actually. I use herbs, food timing corrections, simple meditation tips when needed—whatever helps reset the body’s rhythm without making ppl feel like they’re constantly on edge about their numbers.
And yeah, Saundarya Chikitsa is a big part of my work too. Skin isn’t just skin—it reflects digestion, stress, hormones. I build facial & haircare routines using herbs, abhyanga, lepas, rasayanas, depending on what’s going wrong inside.
Each plan is personalized, and I try to keep it realistic. No big promises, just real, doable healing. |
Achievements: | I am lucky to have recieved a national-level award for Ayurvedic service—still feels surreal tbh. That moment kinda validated years of day-to-day work in healing & just staying true to this path. I did my post-grad in Samhita Siddhanta, which really helped me see classical Ayurved texts in a new light—like how deep their logic goes, and how much still applies now if you read them right. Also did a diploma in cosmetic & hair trichology... makes a big diff in how I manage things like hairfall, early wrinkling, skin flareups etc. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with over 15 years into this field—every single year teaching me something new about patience, patterns, and how healing almost never follows a straight line. I run my own Ayurvedic hospital, where I lead a small but deeply committed team that works with patients who often feel like they’ve “tried everything” before walking through our doors. That feeling is familiar, and it’s exactly why I do what I do. My work centers around chronic and lifestyle-related illnesses—digestive messiness, joint pain that just won’t let go, hormonal stuff, PCOS, metabolic chaos, low energy, skin flares, even anxiety tied to gut & sleep cycles. I build personalized plans rooted in Ayurveda—Panchakarma, herbal meds, ahar-vihar (diet+routine) corrections, and when needed, therapeutic yoga or breathing work. No two plans are ever the same, because no two bodies or minds are ever stuck in the exact same imbalance. I’ve spent years working closely with classical Panchakarma protocols—properly timed detox, rejuvenation, and maintenance therapies that don’t just “cleanse,” but actually rebuild the system. These treatments are carefully chosen—sometimes light, sometimes intense, always based on the person’s strength and doshic state. And yeah, all of that is handled inside the hospital where we aim to create not just treatment space, but a kind of pause from outside noise. A chance to reset. One thing I care deeply about is making Ayurveda practical. I don’t expect patients to go live in a forest or boil 9 herbs three times a day while working full-time. My role is to adapt the science to their reality without losing its depth. That’s how sustainable results actually happen. We help people understand their own bodies again, which in itself is half the medicine. At the end of the day, my work is about more than fixing symptoms. It’s about building trust, holding space, and showing people what healing can really look like—when it’s allowed to go deep and slow, but strong.