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Dr. Rajashree Kiran Marathe
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Dr. Rajashree Kiran Marathe

Dr. Rajashree Kiran Marathe
I work at home or home visits
Doctor information
Experience:
22 years
Education:
Ayurvedic Medical College, Kolhapur, Maharashtra
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly working with skin & joint issues.. that’s where my real focus is in Ayurveda. Things like eczema, psoriasis, acne—plus arthritis, joint pain, stiffness—all of them need more than just surface fixes. I use herbal preperations, Panchakarma detox (done properly, not rushed), and diet changes that actually match the patient’s needs, not some generic chart. My way is to go deep into the cause, not just cover symptoms, coz if you miss that the problem just keep coming back. Sometimes it’s diet, sometimes lifestyle, sometimes stress… usually a mix. For joints, I look at strengthening, reducing inflammation naturally, improving mobility step by step. For skin, it’s about calming the inside first before expecting the outside to glow. I also make treatment plans very specific—no “one-size-fits-all” here—because each body reacts different. And yeah, sometimes progress is slow, but that’s fine when you’re aiming for long-term relief instead of quick, short-lived results. In the end, my goal is simple: help the body heal itself, and make sure the patient feels better not just for a few weeks but for good.
Achievements:
I am done with my PGDEMS & PGDHM from Pune, and honestly both of these shaped a big part of how I handle patient care now. Emergency Medical Services training made me sharper, quicker at decision making… you don’t get much time to think when every second is counting. The hospital management part? that really opened my eyes to how systems work (or sometimes don’t) in healthcare. Now I can respond fast in crisis and also keep things smooth behind the scenes.

I am still grateful for my time working as a Medical Officer at Mai Mangeshkar Hospital, Pune… those days shaped a lot of how I see patient care now. It was busy, sometimes overwhelming, but it gave me solid hands-on experience across so many cases—acute emergencies one moment, long-term chronic issues the next. I was part of multiple departments, working side by side with specialists, nurses, support staff… you really learn the value of a team when you’re in the middle of it all. My role was a mix of diagnosing, treatment planning, monitoring progress, and making those quick, on-the-spot calls in emergencies (which honestly used to get my heart racing, but in a good way). Outpatient and inpatient care felt like two different worlds but equally important—one about immediate relief, the other about steady recovery. I handled patient assessments, managed sudden critical situations, and made sure follow-ups were actually meaningful instead of just a box ticked. There were late nights, early mornings, and some tough calls, but also those moments when a patient’s condition started improving and you knew you did something right. That whole experience didn’t just polish my diagnostic skills, it taught me how to balance clinical precision with actual human empathy. Because no matter how advanced your knowledge is, if a patient doesn’t feel heard or cared for, the treatment is only half-effective. Now in my Ayurvedic practice, I carry that same mix—efficiency from a clinical setting and the kind of compassion that doesn’t get rushed. I think that’s what really stays with me from those hospital days, and probably will forever.