Dr. Somya
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Uttarakhand Ayurveda University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working with womens health issues, especially gyne problems like PCOS, irregular cycles, infertility, endometriosis, menopause discomfort n even those stubborn recurring infections that just keep coming back. My way of treating is rooted in tridosha balance—Vata, Pitta, Kapha—because when that’s off, hormones and overall health start acting up too. I use rasayana therapies for rejuvenation, herbal medicines, panchakarma detox, diet changes, and lifestyle adjustments that actually fit into a woman’s real daily routine (no overly complicated stuff unless it’s truly needed). Each plan is different, coz every body constitution is different, and prakriti really does decide how well something works. I also like mixing classical ayurveda wisdom with a modern medical understanding, so treatment stays safe n effective without losing authenticity. The goal isn’t just quick relief—it’s helping women find balance and keep it for the long run. |
Achievements: | I am an Ayurveda graduate with real hands on work in panchkarma therapies, not just theory but actually doing them and seeing how balancing doshas make big difference. During my internship we also practiced agnikarma, quite a precise n skill heavy procedure.. sometimes tricky to get right. Those expereince taught me a lot about patient comfort and technique, and made me more confident in using authentic methods for healing naturally. |
I am working as an Ayurvedic doctor where my day is a mix of listening, observing and trying to figure out what’s really going on inside a person’s body before anything else. Most of my work is built around the tridosha concept—Vata, Pitta, Kapha—and how their imbalance leads to so many health issues. Some patients come with chronic problems, some with sudden flare ups, and honestly no two cases are ever same. I use herbal medicines, panchakarma therapies, diet guidance n lifestyle tweaks to build a plan that suits each person’s prakriti. Sometimes it’s about detox, sometimes just small changes in eating habits or sleep can shift things a lot more than people expect. I also spend time explaining why Ayurveda isn’t just about curing, but also preventing future troubles... though not everyone wants to hear about long-term changes right away. Over the years, watching patients recover in a way that feels steady n lasting rather than quick n short-lived makes the effort worth it. And yes, there are challenges—following up regularly, keeping people motivated when progress is slow, making sure they stick to the plan without feeling pressured. But those are also the parts that teach me the most. For me, Ayurveda is not some fixed set of rules from ancient texts—it’s a living system that adapts to each person’s body, mind, and daily life, and I just try to make it work for them in the most natural way possible.