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Dr. Aishwarya Kashid
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Dr. Aishwarya Kashid

Dr. Aishwarya Kashid
Sangamner
Doctor information
Experience:
6 years
Education:
Loknete Rajarambapu Patil Ayurvedic Medical College & Hospital
Academic degree:
Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda
Area of specialization:
I am mainly working with chronic conditions that usually drag on for years—like long-standing joint pain, stiffness in knees or back, sluggish digestion, acidity that never fully goes, or even things like thyroid & obesity that people just kind of “learn to live with” over time. I try to not jump into treatment too soon—I like to trace the issue back, figure what’s actually going wrong, then I plan the line of treatment. I use a mix of things really. Classical Ayurvedic medicines (not patent stuff), herbs, dietary suggestions.. small lifestyle tweaks. And if needed I use Panchakarma—am pretty hands-on with that part, not just prescribing from a desk. I usually recommend it for detox or deeper chronic issues, and yeah sometimes just for restoration when body feels burntout for no clear reason. I think natural doesn’t mean slow. It just means you heal better. I just try to make sure people feel understood, not rushed into protocols that don’t match their real need.
Achievements:
I am working mostly with patients who come in with long-pending health troubles—and till now I’ve helped over 500 of them get better through proper Ayurvedic care. Not rushed, not generalized, but stuff that actually fit *their* body, lifestyle, and history. I stay very focused on safety and try to not overload treatment plans. It's more about timing, right dosage, & what suits that person.. than throwing in everything at once. And I always keep checking what's working n whts not.

I am a practicing Ayurveda doctor, been working in this field for about 4 yrs now. What really drives me is not just symptom relief—but that full-circle kind of healing where mind, body, habits all start syncing up. I usually work with people who have lifestyle disorders (like acidity, sleep issues, stress, PCOS etc) and also more stubborn stuff like chronic skin problems, joint pain, sluggish digestion—things that don’t just go away with a pill. I always begin with understanding the patient’s *prakriti*—that unique doshic blueprint—because nothing in Ayurveda is one-size-fits-all, right? Then I build a treatment plan using classical Ayurvedic medicines (not those generic over-the-counter ones), sometimes Panchakarma if it's needed, but always paired with simple shifts in food and routine. I spend time explaining all that. Like, why we're doing what we're doing. Patients shouldn’t feel lost in jargon. Even with less time in practice compared to senior docs, I’ve treated a pretty good number of cases and learned a lot. I keep going back to the texts—Charaka, Ashtanga, sometimes even lesser-known ones—because each time you read them after treating real people, something new clicks. I try to stay grounded in what works, not what’s trending or fast or marketable. I care about sustainability in healing—where the person actually feels better *and* understands how to stay that way. And I’m still learning every day. Every patient teaches something.. even the ones who don’t come back. Maybe especially them.