Dr. Mini Devadiga
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Dhanvantari Ayurvedic College, Siddapura |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with skin disorders and women’s health stuff—PCOD, infertility—these need patience and very customised approach, nothing “one size fits all”. I also see quite a few older patients, where the focus isn’t just curing but making life lighter, more comfortable, more active even with age. Ayurveda can be really gentle yet deep there. As a trained dietician I mix food therapy into almost every plan—herbs alone aren’t enough if the diet keeps pulling in the other direction. Every treatment is shaped by the person’s prakriti, season, and what’s actually doable in their daily routine. Some cases need detox first, others just steady dietary and lifestyle changes, but the idea stays same—address the root, not just patch the symptom. That’s what keeps results holding longer and makes people feel genuinely better instead of just “ok for now”. |
Achievements: | I am working with quite a range but honestly the most rewarding part was treating cases of PCOS, post-CVA recovery and a bunch of lifestyle disorders that just wouldn’t settle with quick fixes. I mix the classical Ayurvedic therpies with diet & lifestyle tweaks—sometimes very small ones—and somehow they make big difference. Watching patients get back their balance, energy.. even their confidence, feels like the real measure of success more than any fancy title or paper. |
I am working as an Ayurvedic doctor for about 2 years now and honestly… every case still teaches me something new. My work covers a pretty broad range—digestive problems, women’s health concerns, joint & muscle pains, stress-related troubles—each needing its own way of looking. I don’t just try to calm symptoms; I really dig into why the imbalance started in the first place. That means checking prakriti, vikriti, how a person eats, sleeps, moves, even small lifestyle patterns that seem harmless but aren’t. Once I get that picture, I build a plan—herbal meds, Panchakarma detox if needed, diet tweaks, daily routines—that actually fit into the patient’s life instead of being impossible lists. Sometimes we keep it simple, sometimes more intense, depends. Over these years, I’ve seen how slow steady changes rooted in classical Ayurveda really shift a person’s health, and not just on paper—energy levels, mood, digestion, skin, all of it. I keep revisiting the old texts too, they always have something I missed before. My patients come from diff backgrounds and conditions, some just want relief, others want a full lifestyle re-set. Either way, I keep the process open—explain what’s happening in their body, why we’re doing what we do, and how they can keep the results lasting. End of the day, my goal stays the same: ethical, patient-first care that respects their individuality and uses Ayurveda not as a quick fix but as a long-term guide to living in balance.