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Dr. Ankita Patil
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Dr. Ankita Patil

Dr. Ankita Patil
Currently I'm unemployed
Doctor information
Experience:
3 years
Education:
Maharashtra University Of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly working in general Ayurveda but with a strong focus on women’s health too—kind of naturally grew into both. My regular cases include digestion issues, piles, acne, stress, joint stiffness n all those slow-building lifestyle-type things. I don’t believe in one-size-for-everyone. I usually go deep into habits, food patterns, sleep quality, that kind of stuff. Treatment-wise I stick to classical herbal combos, tweak diets, sometimes Panchakarma if really needed. When it comes to gynecology, I work a lot with PCOS, irregular periods, fertility planning and even perimenopause issues. And I really prefer staying away from hormonal meds unless absolutely no other option. In Ayurveda we’ve got so many subtle but strong tools—uttar basti, nasya, rasayanas—that work slowly but steadily. Most ppl I meet want relief without heavy side effects, and that's what I try to offer. Care plans I give are simple to follow, long-term oriented, and usually involve day-to-day habits just as much as herbs. Healing takes time, but it shouldn’t feel overwhelming.
Achievements:
I am trained to handle normal deliveries on my own—done that multiple times with confidence though yeah, every case still teaches smthing new. I also do CuT insertions pretty smoothly, not just mechanically but making sure the pt is calm and understands what’s happening. Other gynac procedures too like DnC or PV exams—I've got hands-on with those in real-time setups, not just labs. Def feel more steady now in providing basic but real reproductive care that actually supports women through diff phases.

I am working in Ayurveda for close to 3 years now—mostly with general cases but also lots of women's health. My practice kind of grew around conditions like irregular periods, PCOS, fertility hurdles, sluggish digestion, skin breakouts, piles, all that. I look at everything through the lens of imbalance—not just doshas but daily rhythms, food stuff, mental clutter, things ppl don’t always think are linked. I rely on herbal meds, Panchakarma sometimes, and honestly just simplifying routines. Each person gets a plan that fits *them*, not just the disease label. Apart from OP consults, I’ve also trained in OT-based care—assisted and performed minor n some major Ayurvedic procedures esp. for gynac cases. Whether it’s kshara karma for piles or uttara basti-type protocols for fertility, I like balancing precision with calm patient handling. Not rushing anyone, not overdoing either. Even in surgery, Ayurveda asks for awareness—before, during, and after. I always try to bring classical Ayurvedic thinking into even modern setups. If someone walks in with chronic fatigue, or eczema, or repeated infections, I don’t stop at symptoms. I dig a bit—lifestyle stuff, food triggers, hormones, sleep. It might take time but it makes sense. And yeah, patient education matters—I explain things in plain talk, no jargon, let them ask again if confused. That clarity builds trust. I believe in staying open to learning—refining what works, unlearning what doesn’t, adapting without losing the roots of this system. And no matter the setup—rural clinic or city OPD—I’m focused on helping people not just *feel* better, but actually get stronger from inside. That's the point, right? To help the body remember how to heal itself, not just patch things up for a while.