Dr. Sanjay P Patil
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | KAHER Shri BMK Ayurveda Mahavidyala |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly into treating diabetes and chronic skin problems, like that’s kinda where my work naturally settled. I use a very dosha-based style, like proper Ayurveda—classic formulations, specific ahar-vihar changes and tweaks in lifestyle, all tuned to the person not just the condition. You can’t treat two diabetes cases the same even if sugars look alike, right? Sometimes the pitta’s the issue, sometimes it’s agni, sometimes people just stuck in wrong daily rhythm.
Chronic skin stuff—eczema, acne that won’t go, psoriasis patches that flares randomly—these need more than creams. I try to go backward... like what’s disturbing the system deep down? Gut? Liver? Hormones off? If needed, I go slow, but with layered protocol—internal meds, maybe local lepas, dietary clean-up... people expect fast but sometimes skin's more stubborn than you’d think.
I also work with people goin thru cancer treatment—no, not as an oncologist but as someone helping with side effects n emotional distress. Just being there to support their fatigue, appetite loss, fear spirals, body pain… I give them Rasayanas, restorative care, gentle detox ideas too when appropraite. And sometimes just listening, being in their corner.
I don’t try to overpower the disease. I try to help the person stand steadier through it. |
Achievements: | I am kinda into research stuff, not in a big loud way but like steadily. I’ve worked along with a few really good faculty folks—on papers, talks, those long academic sessions where ideas stretch out and things click slowly. A few of my research papers got published too.. which I didn’t expect at first honestly. But yeah, going through that process actually shifted how I see clinical cases—less guesswork, more evidence-backed clarity. Keeps me grounded, keeps me learning every time. |
I am Dr. Sanjay P. Patil—BAMS, PGDEMS, MHA—and most of what I do sits right at the edge where classical Ayurveda meets emergency medicine. Sounds like two diff worlds maybe, but for me they kinda balance each other. My training in Ayurveda gave me depth in chronic care, dosha theory, subtle pathology... and then I did my postgrad in Emergency Medical Services 'cause I needed to know how to act fast too, in real-life hospital floors. No time to check nadi when someone’s crashing, right? I’ve worked in hospitals across levels—govt setups, private clinics, multispeciality units—where I had to think on my feet for trauma, cardiac episodes, sometimes poisoning cases, or even mental breakdowns. At the same time I’ve treated a ton of chronic cases like skin issues, IBS, gout, migraine stuff that’s low-grade but just doesn’t leave. What helped was combining precise diagnosis (Ayurveda does that well), then planning something that works in layers—not just treating the symptoms, but finding why it's stuck there in the first place. I’m big on bridging that gap between acute hospital protocols and dosha-based therapy. Like you *can* stabilize a patient in the ICU and later support their liver with herbs, or detox gently post antibiotics. That’s where the integrative part really kicks in. I’m not rigid about pure-anything, what matters is what helps *that* patient on *that* day. I also care a lot about clarity—patients should know what’s going on, why we’re doing virechana or skipping it, or why that daily kadha matters more than their nightshift snacks. Whether someone comes to me after a panic attack or with chronic sinus, I want the process to feel safe, practical, and yeah... not confusing. Honestly, I don’t think Ayurveda or allopathy needs to win. I think they just need to talk better. That’s kinda my job now—helping them talk better inside hospital walls.