Dr. Vibha Parihar
Experience: | 7 years |
Education: | Rajkiya Ayurvedic College &Hospital |
Academic degree: | Master of Surgery in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am a Gynecologist, Obstetrician & Fertility Expert—basically living in the middle of everything that affects women’s health across ages. I mostly deal with stuff like hormonal shifts, irregular periods, infertility issues, and pregnancy—yeah, including high-risk ones that can get intense sometimes. My interest really leans into fertility though... I mean, helping couples through that uncertainty, one step at a time, feels incredibly meaningful.
I like to mix detailed diagnostic evals with a kind of patient-first rhythm... like not just treating bloodwork but *listening* to what’s missing in the whole story. I do a lot of one-on-one planning, keeping in mind emotional fatigue too, not just clinical urgency. Whether it’s choosing the right IUI timing or monitoring a pregnancy closely—I try to tailor it all to what each patient really needs rn. No one-size-fits-all vibe. Holistic isn’t just a word for me, it’s kinda how my OPD works daily. |
Achievements: | I am someone who really cared about learning properly, right from the start. I got Gold Medals in both BAMS and MS (Obstetrics & Gynaecology), which—honestly—meant a lot ‘cause it showed I wasn’t just memorizing stuff but actually digging into it. That dual exposure to Ayurveda & modern gynaecology helped shape the way I treat patients now. Like I’m not stuck in one system—I look at the whole picture, especially for fertility cases or chronic gynae issues where both perspectives can matter. |
I am an Obstetrician, Gynaecologist & Fertility doctor currently practicing at Gynae Pro Clinic in Dehradun under Dr Vibha Parihar \[MS] who's been a huge mentor btw. My day mostly revolves around handling menstrual disorders, pregnancy care—esp high-risk ones, and of course helping couples through all that fertility journey chaos, which is way more layered than ppl assume. Every case’s a new mix of hormone patterns, timings, emotional ups n downs... no two are same really. Fertility medicine is a space I really got pulled into. I try to make my approach feel safe but also realistic, where couples don’t feel pushed into aggressive steps too soon. A lot of that means spending time explaining, rechecking reports, listening again—especially when you sense something doesn't sit right despite normal labs. I’ve also been doing plenty of gynecological surgeries and minimally invasive work when required. Still, I think what matters most is knowing *when* not to intervene and just wait-watch with the patient, esp during antenatal phases where panic can lead to overtreatment. Diet, supplements, sleep—these aren’t side topics in my OPD. I talk about those just as much as scans or medications bcoz all of it together supports long-term reproductive health. Modern tech is great, we use it a lot at the clinic, but I always try to balance it with a person-first kind of care. My aim? To not just treat the symptoms or fix one cycle—but to help women feel like they’ve understood what their body’s trying to say, and leave a consult feeling actually heard.