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Dr. Bhagyesh Anil Karale
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Dr. Bhagyesh Anil Karale

Dr. Bhagyesh Anil Karale
Gurubhakti Chikitsalaya, Akola, MH
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Maharashtra University of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly drawn toward treating skin disorders—not just the surface stuff like rashes or itching but chronic deep-layer conditions that kinda come with emotional baggage too. Psoriasis, eczema, pigmentation issues... things that don’t go away with short fixes. I try to go beyond just giving lepams or tablets. I work a lot with gut-health, sleep cycle, and subtle mental blocks that reflect on skin. Alongside skin, diet planning has become this big part of my consults—not calorie counting, but dosha balancing through real, local food. Every prakruti needs diff kinds of digestion support. Some cases, I’ll go super simple like just correcting dinner timing or cutting excess sour-salt. Other times it’s more layered. And yeah, psychological well-being always creeps into everything. Not every patient comes in saying they feel low or anxious, but it shows—in skin, in hormones, in eating patterns. I pay attention to that and suggest basic medhya herbs or routine changes that help slow the chaos down. It’s all connected... Ayurveda just makes you see how.
Achievements:
I am someone who kinda likes going deep into stuff—like when I did my research on Diabetic etiology and it got recognised nationally, that was wild but also felt right. It meant something clicked. I’ve also completed 15+ focused courses on Ayurvedic concepts and clinical topics—some were around herbs, few were about patient psychology... all that really shaped how I work now. It’s not flashy work, but it’s layered. I think small learnings built the biggest shifts tbh.

I am a graduate from Maharashtra University of Health Sciences (MUHS) where my foundation in Ayurveda actually got shaped in a real way—not just textbooks, but also the mindset of how you see health as a whole. What really made a shift for me though was getting the chance to train under some amazing mentors—Vaidya Suvinay Damale Guruji, Vaidya Praveen Banmeru, and Vaidya Sachin Mhaisne. Learning under them was honestly intense but opened my eyes to how deep classical Ayurveda can go... not just herbs and doshas, but logic, nari-pariksha, pathya-apathya, the small things that affect everything. Their clinical approach was practical, rooted, and yet very individualized. That’s what I try to carry into my practice now—when I meet a patient, I don’t jump into protocol mode. I look for patterns, body types, mental state... sometimes even things like weather, eating rhythm, sleep flow, etc. Because yeah, all of it matters in Ayurveda. My main area of work revolves around holistic, patient-specific treatments—meaning no fixed formulas. I usually mix herbal medicines with diet corrections, routine shifting and a lot of small lifestyle tweaks (people underrate those, honestly). Sometimes just balancing sleep or changing dinner timings does more than 3 meds. Consultations with me are less about fast results, more about sustainable healing. I believe every body has its own code and my job is to just help untangle it without pushing things harshly. And yeah, I keep going back to the texts when needed. Charak, Sushruta—they’re not outdated, they’re just under-read.