Dr. Harshita Hyati
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into Panchakarma work — not just the basic stuff, but full-on classical detox and rejuvenation protocols, all rooted in traditional Ayurvedic texts. My main focus is treating chronic skin issues like eczema, psoriasis, fungal patches n similar stuff that doesn’t really go away with quick fixes. I use both internal meds n therapies like Virechana, Raktamokshana, lepa etc depending on what the person’s body actually needs.
I’m also kinda drawn to geriatric care… like helping older folks who’re dealing with stiff joints, weak digestion, or just general fatigue. Those slow-going age-related problems where a standard one-size-fit plan doesn’t really help — I try to tailor things using a mix of Rasayanas, gentle Panchakarma, diet shift n simple lifestyle edits. Not too intense but still very effective if done properly.
And since I also studied yogic science (which I didn’t really expect to enjoy this much!), I blend yoga, pranayama, and some basic mindful practices into my daily advice. Not just for mental calm but for actual healing impact. I believe if you balance doshas *and* breath, the body gets a real chance to repair. Yeah, I work slow and deep, but that’s kind of my zone. |
Achievements: | I am really drawn to the deeper stuff in Yogic Science, like not just postures but actual therapeutic integration—breathwork, basic dharana, mindful techniques—all of that. I got recognised in that space earlier in my training, which kinda pushed me to seriously blend these tools with Ayurveda. That combo really shifted my practice... Patients started feeling better not just symptom-wise but overall. It made mind-body healing feel more real n less textbookish. |
I am someone who kinda learned the ropes through real hands-on stuff more than just classroom theory. During my internship at Govt. District Hospital, Gadag, I rotated thru departments like casualty, gen. medicine, surgery, and OB-GYN — and that was intense but honestly super helpful. I got to see patients with both acute flare-ups n long-term problems, and learned to act quick, think faster. The exposure was wide but also deep, like I actually *did* things under solid guidance, not just observe. Later, I worked as a duty doc at AYUSH Hospital in Gadag Betgeri. There I really started applying the Ayurvedic side of things in actual OPD and IPD practice. Merging textbook theory with patient behaviour, feedback, pulse reading—ya all that real-time stuff that you don’t catch just in books. I also finished a 366-day internship at DGM Ayurvedic Medical College & Hospital. And I remember being involved in diagnosis, evals, making treatment plans (under supervision ofc), and it really forced me to connect Ayurvedic principles with each person’s condition, not just follow blanket protocols. What stuck with me is how important it is to balance textbook knowledge with situational judgment. Working across multiple settings made me sharper at reading subtle symptoms, managing cases across different systems, and adapting fast. I’ve become more confident in handling both simple n complex presentations, especially in multi-disciplinary environments. I still carry forward that same curiosity n discipline into my current Ayurvedic practice—trying to stay rooted in classical wisdom but also being fully aware of practical modern healthcare needs.