Dr. Anjali Sehrawat
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | National College of Ayurveda and Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly drawn towards general medicine, dermatology & yeah women's health too—those 3 areas keep coming up again n again in my practice, and I think I just naturally lean into them. I try to look beyond the surface symptoms, esp when it comes to skin rashes or hormonal shifts that repeat or feel cyclical. Like, one treatment doesn’t really fit all. Sometimes digestion’s the missing link, sometimes it’s stress or just poor sleep cycles nobody talks about.
My goal is always the same tho—figure out where the *imbalance* started and gently nudge the system back to harmony. I use herbs a lot, obviously, but not blindly. I also keep tweaking food plans and habits—like if someone’s dosha is clearly off but they’re on the go 24/7, gotta factor that in right? I’ve seen that when we do small consistent shifts with diet or sleep, the big stuff also starts to move on its own. I'm not someone who'll overload meds... I go slow, watch the body’s reaction and adjust things as needed. That's kinda my way. |
Achievements: | I am someone who really values strong basics, and I guess that came from my BAMS training—graduated in 2023. Those years kinda set the tone for how I see medicine now. The course gave me a good mix of classical Ayurvedic shastra and also modern stuff like pathology and diagnostics, which helps more than ppl realise tbh. What stood out most for me during training was learning how to actually *see* the patient, not just the disease... That’s where it all starts, right?
I picked up core clinical skills during that time—learning how to take proper history, read prakriti signs, even figuring out when something needs a referral or more tests. I'm still building on that every day in practice. Wouldn't call anything perfect yet but the path feels solid. |
I am Dr. Anjali Sehrawat. Graduated BAMS from National College of Ayurveda & Hospital, Barwala (Hisar) in 2023—and right now I'm doing my residency, learning a lot everyday under senior clinicians who’ve been in the field way longer than me. It’s kind of intense but also really grounding. Like, it makes you pause before assuming anything about a patient. During my UG and clinical rotations, I got good hands-on exposure... not just in diagnosing through Ayurvedic nidan but also understanding where and when Allopathic tools (like lab reports or acute interventions) help fill the gap. I really believe that if you *actually* want to heal someone, you gotta see the whole picture—Ayurveda gives you that depth, but you also need to know when modern input is useful, right? I’m more interested in chronic & lifestyle disorders—stuff like metabolic imbalances, stress-linked issues, digestive problems that linger and slowly pull energy down. I don’t rush into giving churnas or kashayams just bcz the texts say so... I try to see what fits the patient’s prakriti, daily habits, emotional pattern etc. It’s not textbook-perfect every time, but that’s where the real skill grows I guess. I do a lot of thinking abt cause vs symptom—sometimes it's not the problem you see that actually needs solving first. What I care about most is making sure the treatment is safe, ethical, practical, and honest. No overpromising, no pushing meds that don’t fit. And I’m always reading or discussing sth—old Samhitas or recent journals, depends what the case demands. My goal really is to build a practice where people feel seen & understood, not just “managed.” That's where healing actually begins, right?