DR. ARYA.O. S
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | V.P.S.V Ayurveda College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am more into primary care that actually feels personal, not rushed, using classical Ayurvedic principles right from diagnosis to follow-up. During my time at VPSV Ayurveda College, Kottakkal, I got a lot of hands-on with both OP and IP patients—helping seniors with diagnosis, herbal med preps, Panchakarma procedures, even follow ups where you really see the progress or sometimes the setbacks. Later at the Govt Ayurveda Dispensary in Kadukutty, I worked in rural health camps, awareness drives, and making medicines in small batches (messy but satisfying). Now I split my work between govt dispensary consults and my own home consultations. I focus mainly on chronic disease managment, preventive health and making treatment plans that are both traditional and practical for the patient’s life. It’s about keeping it affordable, sustainable and still deeply rooted in Ayurveda, without losing the human touch. |
Achievements: | I am building my skills day by day, from internships to my current work, in places as different as OP wards, IP care and small community health setups. I handled patient charts, prepped meds, helped in Panchakarma sessions, joined health camps and even managed long-term chronic cases that really need patience. These roles kinda pushed me to balance proper Ayurvedic diagnosis with real-life practical care.. still learning but more confident each step. |
I am an Ayurvedic physician trained at VPSV Ayurveda College, Kottakkal where I did my BAMS, pretty much living in an enviroment that breath Ayurveda every day. My first proper step into practice was an 11-month internship right there itself, working in both OP and IP wards. I was shadowing seniors, but also doing a lot myself—checking patients, filling treatment charts, giving herbal meds, even jumping in on panchakarma preps when needed. Those daily ward rounds and case discussions, they sharpened how I look at a case, not just by symptoms but the whole picture. After that, I spent a month at the Govt Ayurveda Dispensary in Kadukutty, Thrissur. Smaller place but so much to learn… primary care, health camps, awareness drives, managing without the fancy set up. It gave me a diff perspective on how Ayurveda works at community level. Now I’m working as an Ayurvedic medical officer at a Govt Dispensary. My days are a mix of consults, prescribing, Panchakarma interventions, keeping records (yes that part never ends), and explaining to people how to fit Ayurvedic habits into daily life without making it feel impossible. On the side, I also run private consultations from home, which lets me design more detailed plans for each patient’s prakriti, condition, and lifestyle. Over time, I got better at balancing the classical side of Ayurveda with the practical side of healthcare delivery—diagnosing right, keeping good notes, and making treatments doable. My focus is still the same: making Ayurveda accessible, evidence-based and personal enough that it feels like it belongs to the patient, not just on a prescription pad.