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Dr. Aditi Bhatt
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Dr. Aditi Bhatt

Dr. Aditi Bhatt
Working as a JR in Patanjali ayurved hospital
Doctor information
Experience:
4 years
Education:
Uttarakhand Ayurved Vishwavidyalaya
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am an Ayurvedic physician who’s really into figuring out *why* things go off balance inside the body—like not just patching up digestion or skin flare-ups for the moment, but actually digging into what caused it in the first place. Most of my work revolves around chronic digestive problems (constipation, acidity, IBS-types), respiratory stuff (asthma, allergies), and skin/hair issues that don’t respond well to just topical things. I mostly go with classical Ayurveda formulations but always tweak stuff based on the patient’s *prakriti*, habits, even mood sometimes. I’ll design food charts—yes, actual meal stuff, not just “avoid fried”—and suggest lifestyle shifts, routines, oiling methods, even what time you sleep or wake up if that’s part of the issue. Also I add yoga, pranayama, or small meditation routines into treatment plans if they’re open to it. Not everyone wants all of it, and that’s okay. My aim isn’t to force Ayurveda down someone’s throat—just to make it usable in real life, you know?? I do try to make it sustainable healing though. Not quick fixes that fall apart after 2 weeks. Whole-body, mind, even how you’re feeling emotionally—each part matters in how the body heals.
Achievements:
I am most proud when patients feel seen & better after care—like, genuinely better, not just symptom-wise. If there's one thing I could call an *achievement*, it’s earning their trust, especially from the ones who've been through multiple failed attempts elsewhere. Every time someone says they feel hopeful again or their digestion/sleep/skin finally shifted... that’s the real win for me. Healing's slow sometimes, but when it clicks—it's worth all the hours & doubts and even repeat followups.

I am working as a Gynecologist, Obstetrician & Fertility specialist with around 3 years of full-time clinical experience. It's been a fast-moving ride honestly—one minute you're learning protocols, next you're knee-deep in patient histories and treatment planning. Most of my day-to-day work centers around managing menstrual disorders, PCOD, infertility cases (a lot of them lately), and pregnancy care—especially the more high-risk ones that keep you thinking even after the shift ends. I also do gynecological procedures, both minor and advanced. What I really care about tho is how each woman’s story is different—you can’t treat a fibroid case like just a fibroid, you have to understand how it’s affecting *her*, you know? And that’s how I try to work. Fertility is one area where that’s specially true—no two couples come in with the same weight on their minds. I’ve seen that even a little shift in how we listen or explain can change the whole experience for them. At my current setup I use both evidence-based medical protocols and a bit of room for personalized approach, especially when the patient’s lifestyle, stress levels, or emotional state needs it. I’m big on clear communication, though sometimes I probably overexplain stuff lol. But I’d rather they go home knowing why a test matters or what we’re trying with a certain treatment than feel lost in the process. And yeah, it’s just 3 years, but I’ve packed in a lot during this time—OPDs, IPDs, deliveries, surgeries, fertility consults... all of it. Still learning every single day tbh. And honestly that’s what keeps me going.