Dr. Anjali Meena
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | All India Institue of Ayurveda |
Academic degree: | Master of Surgery in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into working with PCOS and infertility, those are two areas I end up seeing again n again—probably cause they connect with so much else, like stress, gut imbalance, sleep gone haywire or even just poor cycles from yrs. My main focus is on Ayurvedic ways to handle hormonal chaos without pushing harsh suppressive stuff. I use a mix of classical herbs (some custom combos when needed), detox—like mild virechana or basti in certain types—and some daily lifestyle clean-up. Not everyone likes that part, but it helps.
I also work a lot with gut issues, especially in women. Bloating, IBS, weird indigestion that flares up during periods or ovulation—they’re all signs that something’s off deeper. For many of my patients, improving agni (digestive fire) kinda shifts a lot. Sometimes even before touching their fertility plan.
Every plan I give is rooted in prakriti, not one-size-all types. And I don’t rush. Cause honestly, balance takes time. But once it starts shifting, women feel that change—not just in labs but like in real energy, cycles, moods. |
Achievements: | I am trained in MS (Ayu) Prasuti Tantra & Stri Roga, which kinda shaped how I look at women’s health—not just textbook stuff but real-world cycles, hormonal stuff, fertility challenges that don’t follow a pattern. This degree helped me dig deeper into managing PCOS, irregular periods, and all stages from menarche to menopause. Every case teaches something new, even now. I don’t just treat—I'm constantly tweaking, rethinking, coz no two women respond the same anyway. |
I am Dr. Anjali Meena and honestly, this whole journey with Ayurveda n’ women’s health... it’s been kinda grounding in ways I didn’t expect. I did my BAMS from Delhi University and then went ahead with MS (Ayu) in Prasuti Tantra & Stri Roga from All India Institute of Ayurveda, New Delhi. Right now I’m working as Consultant & Assistant Professor in the Dept. of OBGY at Government Ayurveda College and Hospital, Kota. It's a mix of clinical + teaching and both kinda feed into each other, weirdly satisfying when they click. I’ve been practicing for over 5 yrs now and mostly my focus stays on women—young, middle age, elderly—wherever they are in their cycle or phase of life. Menstrual stuff, pcos-pcod, infertility that just won’t respond easily, pregnancy (esp. antenatal support), or even when menopause hits hard—I try to approach all of it with care and bit of flexibility. No fixed formula type of approach. Usually, I go with classical Ayurvedic protocols first—herbal formulations, sometimes Panchakarma if detox feels really needed, plus daily routine + diet fixes. Like sometimes, a simple tweak in sleep timing with a mild rasayan makes a real differnce. My consults always include prakriti assessment, cause honestly without that, it’s like guessing in the dark. And I do try to make sure we're not just chasing symptoms, but digging into what’s behind them—stress, agni, ama, hormonal loops, even emotional baggage when it shows up in the body. Also in my current role, I stay involved in clinical research and guiding students. They ask good questions—keeps me on my toes. I try to stay close to evidence-based understanding of Ayurveda, not just textbook copy-paste. I think our traditional system has space for individualised healing, and I like bridging that with the real-world demands of patients who want clear answers. Whether someone’s dealing with fertility issues or mood swings post-menopause, I just want to create a space where they feel heard, held, and seen—not just diagnosed.