Dr. Tinu Rosilint Maria
Experience: | 7 years |
Education: | Ahalia Ayurveda Medical College Palakkad Kerala |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with chronic cases these days—things that don’t really go away with just quick meds. My core areas are infertility & gynecological problems, esp. menstrual irregularities and PCOS, those show up a lot. I also see ppl with piles, fissures, digestion all over the place or skin flare-ups like acne, eczema etc. I don’t treat symptoms in isolation—I try to trace the root, even if it take time. I use herbal meds, panchakarma when needed, and honest lifestyle cleanup (not always easy!). |
Achievements: | I am trained in women’s health from Vanitha Clinic n did advanced Ayurvedic dermatology at Sparsham (that part really shaped how I see skin healing). My main thing’s been balancing gynac + skin care in actual practice, not just theory. Oh and I got Best Outgoing Doctor too.. bit surprised honestly, but guess my mix of study + patient care worked well. Feels good when long study hours + real patient effort gets noticed like that. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who’s lived and worked in Kerala for 7+ years now—hard to even describe how much that shaped my way of seeing health. Being here meant real exposure to classical Ayurveda, not just theory from books but actual clinical stuff. I got to treat a wide range of conditions, like infertility cases, PCOS, menstrual disorders, eczema, piles, gastritis... even long-standing sciatica and arthritis that people came in with after trying everything else. Most days I feel like the learning never really stops—each patient is different. I mean, two people with the same "diagnosis" on paper might need entirely different paths. That’s something I really lean into—individualized protocols based on dosha imbalance, stage of disease, and ya, even their emotional state sometimes. Working in Kerala, I also got hands-on with Panchakarma therapies—not just in a textbook sense, but real-time application with all its complexity. Some protocols are straightforward, like virechana for skin or basti in joint care, but often it's a lot more layered. There’s this constant balancing act between managing symptoms and gently nudging the body toward deeper correction. In those 7 years, I didn’t just gain clinical experience—I sort of deepened my own trust in the body’s healing capacity when it’s supported the right way. Patients here don’t always ask for quick fixes, they’re open to process—and that has taught me to be more patient too. Honestly, that’s maybe the most valuable thing I’ve learned—healing isn’t linear. It has loops. My work now is focused more around chronic conditions and women's health (esp. PCOS, hormonal shifts, fertility blocks). But I still keep space for skin issues, digestion, even post-COVID recovery when ppl reach out. Long story short—those 7 years in Kerala really grounded my approach, not just in knowledge but in actual lived practice.