Dr. Anu Rani
Experience: | 7 years |
Education: | Shri Krishna Govt Ayurvedic College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with Ayurvedic cases that need more than just surface-level fixes, you know? I deal a lot with women’s health—like PCOD, infertility, fibroids, endometriosis, all that complicated stuff that usually gets ignored or treated with just temporary pills. But I also get patients with skin troubles—psoriasis, dermatitis, vitiligo, hairfall that won’t stop, greying in young age etc. Digestive issues are another big area... IBS, bloating, hyperacidity, even UC—those things take time but respond pretty well to classical protocols. Then there’s thyroid, type-2 diabetes, obesity-related stuff, which are way more common than ppl realise. Allergies, asthma, sinusitis—yep, they land up too. For kids, I try to help with immunity drops, appetite building, or issues like bedwetting n wheezing that comes every season change. I mix diet guidance, lifestyle tweaks, herbs & Panchkarma when needed. It’s not quick-fix work, but it’s deep, and that's what I actually prefer doing. |
Achievements: | I am someone who tries to stay involved beyond the clinic too. In 2017 I got to be part of the Guinness World Record event in Jaipur—ya the one for biggest Nasya session, kinda wild but cool experiance. Then in 2018, I actually won gold in high jump (didn’t expect that tbh) at the Inter-Ayurvedic Uni Games in Bhopal. Way back in 2015, I joined the Kshar Sutra Karma campaign at Kurukshetra—first taste of real surgical work in Ayurveda, and it stuck with me since then! |
I am working as the Chief Ayurvedic Doctor at Reviving Ayurved—kind of a hands-on role where I guide a small but super focused team. We try to stay rooted in classical Ayurveda while dealing with all the chaos that comes with modern-day conditions. Before this, I was with Reliance Hospital, Amrit Satwa Ayurveda Clinic n Cosmo Hospital, where I got tons of clinical exposure that really shaped how I approach patient care today. Over the years I’ve managed more than 2,000+ cases (give or take—who’s counting exactly?), ranging from skin allergies to gut imbalances, thyroid, PCOS, even stress stuff. Like, I try not to rush into labeling someone’s symptoms—first I go back to basics: what’s their Prakriti, what’s the Dosha imbalance, how’s their digestion, are they sleeping right or just overthinking everything? That kind of thing. I usually build treatment plans that mix the old and the new—Panchakarma if it fits, but also simple stuff like food routines, maybe a Virechana if needed, Rasayana, or sometimes just plain breathing advice. I do a lot of counseling around female hormonal issues too, especially PCOS and fertility—feels like many ppl don’t even know where to start with that. Anyway, I’m not the type to hand over a prescription and walk away. I try to explain what’s happening inside them and why, even if it means repeating myself twice. Because honestly, when ppl understand their own bodies better, they respond way faster to the medicine. I won’t say I’ve figured everything out, but I’m always observing, adjusting, learning more. That part never really stops. Maybe that’s what keeps me so into this—seeing the shift in someone’s health when the dots finally connect. That’s worth all the weird hours and late-night doubts.