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Dr. Nisha Barman
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Dr. Nisha Barman

Dr. Nisha Barman
Currently I m second year PGT studing in Sharira Rachana Department in Govt Ayurvedic College and Hospital Jalukbari
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
Ashwini Ayurvedic Medical College and Research Center, Tumkur
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am holding a diploma in gynecology and most of my clinical time goes into dealing with cases like PCOD, pimple/acne flares, thyroid ups and downs, painful cycles, gastric issues, you name it. Over the years I’ve seen how often these conditions overlap or just shift shape, which makes patient history super important—and yeah, sometimes tricky. I try to go deep into figuring what’s really off in their system... not just what’s showing up on the surface. I also focus a lot on joint pain and muscle stiffness, especially where ppl say pain keeps coming back after some time or shifts from one spot to another. My line of care usually blends herbs, ahar-vihar corrections and some hands-on routine tweaks—basically things that can be actually done in daily life. Not just prescriptions. I like building care plans that aren’t just symptom-driven, esp for women’s health where hormones, stress, lifestyle... all keep clashing. Every case feels a bit diff, so I don’t use fixed combos much. Sometimes it works fast, sometimes we need to wait it out, but I stick to things that make sense long term.
Achievements:
I am proud I could complete my diploma in gynecology—it gave me solid ground to handle women’s health in more structured way. Later I cracked the entrance for PG and secured a govt seat in anatomy, which honestly took a lot of late nights + revision chaos. Both steps shaped how I see clinical cases now, esp when I’m linking symptoms back to structure and doshic roots. This mix of hands-on gyne and academic anatomy helps me offer care that’s a bit more rooted, a bit more aware of depth.

I am doing my PG in Sharira Rachana from Govt Ayurvedic College, Jalukbari—currently in 2nd year. It’s a lot honestly... endless dissection, tracing classical texts line by line, trying to connect that to what shows up in real patients. Sometimes I get stuck between what the books say and what the body shows, but that’s part of the learning I guess. While studying, I’ve also been working with the Health India Platform as a Medical Officer, giving online consultations. That helped me tons in seeing the practical side—like how to translate Ayurvedic principles into actual, usable advice that ppl can follow in daily life. I had to keep things both traditional *and* understandable. It’s easy to say dosha imbalance... harder to explain what that means for someone’s breakfast or work stress or fungal rash they got last week. My interest kinda sits right at that overlap—bringing Ayurvedic anatomy into real world care. Not just knowing where sira or marma is, but how those ideas help improve diagnosis or maybe even guide a better treatment choice. I try to give patients not just medicines but also context… like why a certain food or routine matters in *their* case. This whole journey made me more curious (and way more patient) when it comes to understanding how we heal—not just where the pain is, but how the system broke in the first place. I still have lots to learn and honestly I doubt that will ever stop. But for now, this mix of PG training + real-world consults has been giving me a deeper grip on what Ayurvedic care really means today.