Dr. Rupali Naik
Experience: | 7 years |
Education: | Shree Narsingh K. Dube Charitable Trust's Nalasopara Ayurved Medical College |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am trained in Ayurved and mostly my practice centers around infertility & gynae disorders—things like PCOS, fibroids, even chronic cervicitis and menstrual imbalances. But it’s not just that. I deal with vaat vyadhi a lot too...like arthritis, frozen shoulder, cervical stuff etc. I get patients with GI issues—IBS, constipation, hyperacidity. Also, type-2 diabetes, thyroid probs, and uric acid imbalance show up freqently.
I do Panchakarma regularly—Basti, Vamana, Nasya, depending on the prakriti and symptoms. Allergic rhinitis, bronchitis, sinusitis, skin issues like eczema or even hairfall, I see those too. Kids with bedwetting or low immunity. Elderly folks with degenerative stuff... I try to keep the treatment rooted but flexible. Yoga helps when patients actually stick to it—bit tricky with compliance. But the idea is always to go beyond quick relief n' actually clean out the cause, you know?
I just try to keep it simple and real—classical knowledge but adjustd to their life. Sometimes that's harder than the disease itself. |
Achievements: | I am someone who keeps trying to deepen my practice where it really matters—on the ground & with real skills. I did certified trainings in Ayurvedic Gynecology and Obs with ultrasound, which helped me handle female cases a lot better.. Also learned Ayurvedic Dermatology, Panchkarma, and even the basics of Ayurvedic Cardiology (ya, it's niche but v.useful!). Right now I’m also working as Dadar District Coordinator with MAASD to support Ayurveda at local levels—feels meaningful tbh. |
I am working as an Ayurvedic physician for the past 6 yrs now—feels kinda fast, but ya, it’s been a mix of learning, treating, adapting... and a lot of listening too. I’ve been seeing patients from all sorts of backgrounds, trying to make care as personal as it can be. Like, not just "treating" but actually understanding what’s underneath the symptoms. Whether it's digestion issues or skin flare-ups or chronic lifestyle messes like obesity or stress, I try to go at the root, not just top layer stuff. Most of my cases revolve around gut health, skin probs, joints and musculoskeletal complaints, asthma-ish breathing issues, even hormonal things from thyroid swings to metabolic glitches. And ya, a lot of folks come in burnt out—stress, weight gain, all that spirals into other stuff, right? I help them shift toward Ayurvedic routines—herbal medicines that suit their Prakriti, Panchakarma detox when needed, and real food changes, not just diet charts with no soul. I do spend time explaining things. Like why I’m suggesting a therapy, or what a Dosha is doing wrong. Because if someone gets what’s happening in their body, they’ll trust the process more. That matters. I mean, some patients even start tracking symptoms themselves after a while, which helps both sides tbh. I keep studying, always. Research, clinical case learnings, new interpretations of old texts—it's a loop I actually enjoy. Ayurveda has depth, and I feel that deeper I go the more practical I get with treating modern stuff without losing the roots. My focus is just clear—sustainable care, not fast-fix. People don’t need another pill that masks. They need healing that *lasts*.