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Dr. Rajni Yashvantbhai Nandramani
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Dr. Rajni Yashvantbhai Nandramani

Dr. Rajni Yashvantbhai Nandramani
Currently preparing for md entrance
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
Gujarat Ayurved University, Jamnagar
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mainly working in Ayurvedic lifestyle mangement, which for me isn’t just about herbs or diet charts, it’s more like piecing together all the bits of someone’s daily life till the balance feel right again. I tend to go deep into diet planning—like real personalised stuff, not the same list for everyone—and I keep a close eye on how food habits, seasons, and small routine shifts affect long term wellness. Most of my cases circle around hair & skin issues, ENT troubles, and the kind of gynecological concerns that can quietly disrupt life if left unchecked. Hormonal imbalances, chronic sinusitis, acne flares or dandruff that just won’t go—these are things I’ve worked on again and again, always starting from the root cause and not just masking the symptoms. I still stick to classical Ayurvedic principles, but I mix that with very patient-focused discussions, making sure the plan is doable for *their* lifestyle. Seasonal routines, daily practices (dinacharya), herbal support—these are all part of the toolkit. End goal? simple… to leave a person with practical, sustainable solutions they can actually live with, not just follow for a month and forget.
Achievements:
I am a graduate from Global Centre of Traditional Medicine, Jamnagar… managed to keep first class & distinction all thru every academic year (yeah, lot of long nights & endless notes). That strong base in Ayurveda still shapes how I see patients today—always sticking to authentic principles but also making sure treatment is practical n evidence-based. Honestly those years taught me discipline, patience & why details matter so much in real clinical work.

I am still early in my medical journey—around a year of actual hands-on clinical work—but in that time I’ve had my share of moments where textbook learning suddenly meets the real patient in front of you, and you realise some answers come slower than you expect. My work’s taken me across diff departments, from general medicine to preventive care setups, and each day’s been a mix of fast decision-making and slow, careful listening. I try to keep my approach balanced: thorough history taking, evidence-based decisions, but also the space for patients to talk about their fears or the stuff they can’t always explain in medical terms. A lot of my time is in routine cases—hypertension checks, diabetes follow-ups, skin infections—but I also end up guiding people through long-term lifestyle adjustments, which I think is just as important as the prescription itself. I tend to sit with patients longer when I can, making sure they understand why a treatment works, what could go wrong if they skip it, and how it fits into their day-to-day. I don’t want them to feel like the plan is “mine”; it’s ours. I keep myself reading new guidelines, updates in clinical protocols, sometimes even late into the night when a case has stuck in my head. That habit helps me adapt my advice to be both modern and safe—without losing sight of basic, human comfort. Some days are about small wins, like getting someone to stick with their medication for the first time in months. Other days are about accepting you can’t fix everything at once, but you can at least give clarity. I want my patients to feel they can walk in with any concern, no matter how small or how tangled it seems. And while my career’s still young, the mix of constant learning, patient trust, and daily problem-solving keeps me hooked on why I started this path in the first place—to offer care that’s precise, respectful, and real.