Dr. Parineeta Sontakke
Experience: | 6 years |
Education: | Government Ayurveda College, Nagpur |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into managing fungal infections and general medical issues through Ayurvedic methods—those skin rashes, itchings, ringworms, candidiasis types that keep coming back... kinda tricky but I’ve really dug deep into it. I use a mix of herbal medicines (depending on the dosha state), diet tweaks and also lifestyle changes, coz honestly, if people don’t fix daily habits, fungus just returns back again.
Also, I handle a lot of gen med stuff—like fevers, acidity, gut imbalances, mild BP probs etc. Not everything need harsh meds—Ayurveda has gentler but still strong ways to balance these things. My aim’s not to just give temporary relief but to fix the root—whether it's agni imbalance or some suppressed pitta-vata mix.
And I always keep treatments personal... like, no one-size-fits-all. Different prakriti, different plans. Even for the same fungal condition—two ppl get different herbs. That's the beauty of it. I try to keep it real, natural and side-effect free. |
Achievements: | I am working as a Medical Officer under Govt of Maharashtra since 5 years now, mainly handling primary care and preventive services in daily OPD setups. It’s given me tons of real-time exposure—treating everything from seasonal flus to chronic gut stuff to fungal issues. And I use both Ayurvedic principles and general medicine when needed, depending on the case. Over time this role kinda sharpened my skills in managing public health programs too, like screening camps, health talks n all that. |
I am Dr. Parineeta and right now I’m working as a Medical Officer under the Govt. of Maharashtra—been here for 5 years straight, and honestly, each year’s taught me something new. I handle day-to-day clinical care across all sorts of patient profiles… rural, urban, sometimes even tribal belts. It’s not always easy, but working in the govt sector gives you a crazy mix of cases, like from seasonal fevers to chronic gut issues, even psychosomatic stuff. My practice is rooted in classical Ayurveda but ya, I also kinda adapt it to modern-day life—like people’s stress patterns, lifestyle, sleep chaos and diet habits. I try to keep the treatment realistic, not rigid. I work closely with the patients and focus big time on prevention—not just waiting for symptoms to blow up. Most of my approach centers around diet correction, herbal support, and balancing daily routines (dinacharya and all that), but ya, each plan is custom to the patient. Working in govt setup also makes you value patient education more—I do spend time explaining, motivating people to follow through. There’s no shortcut there. And tbh, seeing folks actually get better without heavy meds or side-effects—kinda makes you stay in the field. I also make sure to stay updated with Ayurveda research, current protocols, and state guidelines. Learning's a forever thing here.