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Dr. Aachal Bodade
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Dr. Aachal Bodade

Dr. Aachal Bodade
Mauli arogyam, Yavatmal
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Ayurved college,Pusad, Yavatmal
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who likes keeping things simple but deep-rooted—my entire approach kinda revolves around how Vata, Pitta, Kapha are doing their thing inside you, or maybe not doing it right. I don’t believe in throwing a bunch of medicines at someone and hoping one sticks. I try to read the body, the habits, even small lifestyle stuff people ignore. Then I usually suggest home-prepared remedies, easy diet changes, and when needed, classical herbs that don’t break your pocket. Most ppl come to me for things like diabetes control, pigmentation patches, facial acne that just won’t quit, or white discharge and hormonal irregularities. Also seeing more infertility concerns lately—both men and women. On the chronic end, I deal with vitiligo, frequent migrane types, spondylitis (especially neck/cervical one), and stubborn joint pain that doesn’t respond to painkillers or physio anymore. My thing is: try healing without too much fuss. Ayurveda is slow, yes, but if its done right, its *very* deep. I focus a lot on restoring internal balance—nothing flashy, just honest, practical and consistent care.
Achievements:
I am holding a Certificate in Ayurvedic Diet and Nutrition (CADN), which really changed how i plan healing diets—like now it's not just about digestion or calories, it's more tuned to doshas & season & real life eating. I also did my Certificate in Child Health (CCH), that one helped me deal better with common pediatric stuff—like digestion issues, immunity slumps, colds that keep coming back. These two just added a layer to my practice I didn’t knw i was missing tbh. Real helpful combo.

I am an Ayurvedic doctor with over 3 years of solid clinical exposure—like actual in-the-room, pulse-checking kind of stuff—not just theory or sitting behind a desk. I try to keep my practice as grounded as possible in classical Ayurvedic texts, but yah, I do rely on modern diagnostics like blood tests when the case demands clarity... you just can’t guess inflammation or liver enzyme levels, right? That mix of old and new helps me build treatment plans that actually *work*, not just sound good on paper. Most of my work happens around the OPD and IPD space but I’ve also handled emergencies in casualty units. And let me tell you—seeing those critical cases up close taught me a lot about staying calm, thinking fast, and putting the patient’s life first, even if it means reaching for allopathic meds for acute relief. I'm deeply Ayurvedic, but I won't gamble with someone’s safety when they're in pain or panic. My focus areas? Stroke rehab’s one big one—I’ve worked with post-paralysis patients trying to get back their basic movements and dignity. I also see a lot of joint pain cases, skin conditions (like eczema, pigmentation, chronic acne), and sexual health concerns (esp. premature ejaculation, low libido etc). Hair fall too—more common than you’d think and often tied to deeper doshic imbalance. Whatever the complaint, I don’t just hand over a prescription. We talk. I ask a lot of questions. Then we work on herbs, food tweaks, maybe a few simple rasayanas... and yeah, patience. I do use panchakarma when needed, but not blindly. Not everyone needs a full virechana, and many people just need guidance on how *not* to keep making their condition worse daily. Ultimately, I try to give people a version of care where they feel *seen*, not judged. Like real, long-term healing—not temporary band-aids. That’s the whole point of Ayurveda anyway, right?