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Dr. Sakshi Sharma
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Dr. Sakshi Sharma

Dr. Sakshi Sharma
Vedobi ayurveda
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
CH. Charan Singh University, Meerut
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mainly working with joint disorders, liver issues and focused Panchakarma care—these are the 3 areas I naturally kept leaning into during my practice. Arthritis, joint stiffness, early degeneration—when you actually follow Ayurvedic samprapti and don’t skip steps, the relief people get feels real and lasting. I don’t just give oils and hope it works—I use internal meds, snehana, basti or virechan if needed, and help ppl adjust their routine + food habits in a way that won’t fall apart after 2 weeks. Liver care is another zone I keep returning to. Fatty liver, early jaundice, sluggish digestion, Pitta issues that confuse people—they often come in saying “all tests normal” but they *feel* off. And Ayurveda actually explains why. I work with Agni correction first, then herbal support n detox where needed—slow reset, not instant miracle. Panchakarma’s not a side thing for me—it’s central when used at the right time, in the right way. Whether it’s for joints or gut or skin—I make it fit the person, not just the disease name. That’s the real goal anyway—longterm balance, not short comfort.
Achievements:
I am proud to say I was the university topper during my Ayurved studies—yeah, a lot of late nights, half-read notes, and endless slokas later, it actually meant something. That phase kinda shaped how I approach things now... I don’t skip over the why behind a treatment. Deep theory work helped me get sharper with diagnosis and planning care. It’s not about marks anymore obv, but that discipline I built back then? Still pushes me to stay curious, question more, and keep learning from every pt I see.

I am an Ayurvedic doctor with 2 and a half years of full-time clinical practice—not a huge number maybe, but every single day added something new. I started out wanting to just understand classical Ayurveda better, but over time I ended up working with all sorts of cases—digestive issues, joint pain, lifestyle disorders like obesity or acidity, skin breakouts, just general imbalance that people couldn’t explain in reports. That’s where I realised how powerful even simple herbs or routines can be if matched correctly to the person. My whole focus is on root-cause level care. Not symptom masking, not short-term comfort. I work with Nadi Pariksha, darshana, prashna, all the core diagnostic tools, and then try to *build* a plan that includes Ayurvedic meds, panchakarma when required, dietary guidelines that actually fit their life, and slow but real shifts in lifestyle. I don’t force big changes on day one unless they’re urgent. Sometimes it’s one tweak at a time—because what matters is whether ppl can stick to it. Panchakarma is something I respect a lot, but only use when needed. It’s not a “wellness spa” for me—it’s proper chikitsa. I’ve used snehapan, virechan, basti etc. to support deeper healing, especially in joint and gut-related conditions. Honestly, the most satisfying part is when someone who felt stuck—like really fed up—comes back and says “this actually helped.” That’s the point of all this work. Not just balancing doshas but helping ppl *live* better—clearer mind, better sleep, digestion that works, skin that calms down, pain that eases. That’s what I try to work toward. Ayurveda makes sense to me—scientifically, logically, practically. And I keep learning. Every patient kinda teaches you something if you’re paying attention. I just try to stay honest to the texts and also listen properly to the ppl who walk in with real lives and real struggles. That balance is what I care about most.