Dr. (Vd.) Sandipan Das
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Govt. Ayurvedic College and Hospital, Guwahati |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am an Ayurvedic doctor with a deep focus on skin care, mental health, and fertility—kinda feels like these areas always overlap in ways ppl don’t expect. I mostly work with people dealing with things like acne, uneven skin tone, hair fall, dullness, and early aging... but I don’t jump straight into creams or fancy stuff. I use classic Ayurvedic rasayanas, herbal lepas, diet corrections, and detox methods like virechana or takradhara, depends on what their skin actually needs not just what it looks like.
At the same time, I'm really into Ayurvedic psychiatry—because you can’t fully treat someone if their mind is racing or frozen, right? I help ppl manage anxiety, mood crashes, sleep mess-ups, and that sort of thing using gentle things like Brahmi, Ashwagandha, sometimes just talking, helping them slow down their lifestyle a bit. Small changes, but they stack up.
Also, fertility care. I see both men & women—some with PCOS, others with low sperm counts, or just unexplained stuff. Most of them come to me kinda tired after trying too many things. I use panchakarma to reset their system, then build back with tonics and support their hormones naturally. It’s slow but it works if they stick with it. |
Achievements: | I am trained in Clinical Cosmetology (PG Diploma), Yoga (Diploma), and Nutrition & Health Education—which kinda makes my treatment plan a bit all over the place in a good way. I mix up Ayurvedic medicine with food tweaks, guided breathwork, sometimes panchkarma, sometimes just skin-tech stuff if that’s what fits best. That whole mind–body–skin link really shows up in my work, & having diff tools to work with really helps when ppl come in with tangled up issues. |
I am Dr. Sandipan and right now I’m working as a General Practitioner. That means I see a lot—and I really mean *a lot*—of different kinds of cases every single day. From runny noses and high fevers to diabetes follow-ups, gut issues, skin stuff, even mental health—my day’s never dull. Working across all age groups has kind of sharpened my clinical eye, like you start spotting patterns faster, gettin better at figuring out what’s really going on beneath the symptoms. Even though I handle pretty much everything that comes in, I’ve slowly gravitated toward dermatology and psychiatry. Not sure exactly when it started, but maybe it’s the mix of medical logic and emotional nuance they both need. Skin issues like acne, eczema, fungal infections—they’re not always just “skin-deep,” right? There’s embarrassment, discomfort, self-esteem tangled into it, especially when it's chronic. I try to approach these with patience, explaining stuff clearly, making sure the person feels heard not rushed. Psychiatry’s also become a growing part of my practice—stress, anxiety, low moods, sleep problems, panic attacks. You see these more than people think, sometimes hidden under vague physical complaints. I do what I can within my scope—supportive talks, basic therapy-based conversations, prescribing when needed, and just holding space for what they’re going through. It’s made me more careful with words too, you know? Sometimes just listening properly helps more than the pills. My way of treating isn’t just about giving meds and saying bye. I usually talk to patients about how their habits, sleep, food, screen time, stress, all those little daily things can build up into bigger health issues. We plan things out in small steps. It might be dietary changes, yoga, maybe some mental exercises or routines—I try to tailor things realistically. Nothing rigid, just something that actually fits *their* life. End of the day, I just want each patient to leave with a bit more clarity and less fear about their health. Doesn’t matter if it’s a minor rash or something deeper. They should feel they’re in safe hands and that they’re not alone with it.