Dr. Jitendar Meena
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | All India Institute of ayurveda new delhi |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with ppl dealing with things like eczema or acne that keeps flaring up again n again, hairfall issues that don’t go away no matter what shampoo they try, gut problems like bloating, IBS-type stuff, even some tricky cardiac-respiratory combos. I also get a fair number of cases where nerves n muscles act weird—pain, numbness, stiffness... that sort of thing. My go-to is classical Ayurveda, but when the body’s overloaded, I lean toward Panchakarma—deep detox & reset. It’s not always easy to explain, but once ppl go through proper virechana or basti... you see real shifts. I don’t push same treatment for evryone, tho. Customization's big for me. One size never fits in chronic care. I kinda feel the key is: listen, observe—then work on fixing the root, not just patching up symptoms. That’s where actual long term results come from, not quick band-aid stuff. |
Achievements: | I am kinda deep into hair loss work ‘cause of my thesis on Alopecia Areata—it really made me dig into how Ayurveda sees & treats it, beyond just surface stuff. It wasn’t just theory either, I got to explore real therapies for scalp health, regrowth, and root-level healing, not that patchy-trial stuff ppl try on their own. That study actually changed how I now approach patients with hair complaints. Way more confident now, more precise..and results? ya, much better than before. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with lil over 4 yrs of hands-on work in both govt setups and hardcore clinical practice. My biggest learning curve honestly came during my 3 years as a Resident Doctor at AIIA, New Delhi—super intense, but equally fulfilling. We handled a crazy range of OPD & IPD cases daily, from digestive & skin disorders to chronic joint issues, sometimes just acute fevers too.. and we did all that with pure classical Ayurveda—herbs, therapies, all of it—but backed with diagnostic stuff too, like labs or imaging when needed, which helped tune the treatment better. That’s where I started geting deeper into evidence-based Ayurvedic protocols. Then came my stint as Medical Officer under govt of Rajasthan for 1.3 years—different scene altogether. More rural patients, but the issues were no less complex. I was running OPD & IPD, also kinda managing field visits and preventive health programs too—especially lifestyle disorders, anemia, kids with chronic colds, etc. That really opened my eyes to how Ayurveda needs to be both practical *and* accessible. Over time, I’ve leaned more toward patient-centered care that combines classical texts with real-world diagnostics. I’m huge on early prevention and don’t wait till things worsen. Small tweaks in food. breath. routine. mindset. All that counts. Even for tough conditions—chronic fatigue, skin flare-ups, stress-linked digestion—my idea is to go root level, not just suppress it. I'm still learning, still refining. But yeah, that mix of classical + clinical + public health is something I really try to carry into every case.