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Dr. Akhila Gladis. P
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Dr. Akhila Gladis. P

Dr. Akhila Gladis. P
Sarans Ayush Care, Tnagar, Chennai.
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
Maria Ayurveda Medical College and Hospital, Kanyakumari
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mainly into Ayurvedic managment of lifestyle disorders, which for me means not just listing out conditions but really working with the messy everyday stuff people deal with. Diabetes, PCOD, high BP, thyroid issues, obesity—they’re not just names on a chart, they all connect to habits, stress, diet patterns that sometimes go unnoticed. I use classical Ayurveda therapies, but I don’t just stop there.. I spend time with diet and lifestyle counslling, tweaking things so they actually fit into a person’s routine rather than giving impossible advice. Every plan I make is based on the patient’s prakriti, cause honestly that’s the only way to get real long term results instead of quick fixes. My goal isn’t just numbers on lab reports, it’s restoring balance inside, improving how metabolism works, and making sure the changes stick. I like the idea that healing should feel sustainable and natural, not forced, and that’s how I try to work every single day.
Achievements:
I am working across hospitals, clinics & even wellness centers over the years, and somewhere in between I got good at blending Ayurveda into more modern setups. Not just about herbs or massages, but making real treatment protocols that fit in a clinical enviroment. I learnt a lot from teams—docs, therapists, dieticians—all working together. That mix of traditional healing with mainstream healthcare, it feels like the right way to treat people, whole not just parts.

I am an Ayurvedic physician who really try to look at health as more than just fixing a problem and sending someone away.. I like to see the whole picture—body, mind, even the little day to day habits that shape a person’s well-being. My work follows classical Ayurveda pretty closely, but I also make sure the advice is something a patient can actually follow in real life, not just in theory. I focus on getting to the root of illness rather than just pressing down the symptoms, and that means a lot of attention to prakriti, diet, lifestyle, and sometimes those small hidden triggers people don’t even notice. I’ve worked in a bunch of different setups—big established Ayurvedic hospitals, smaller clinics, even local dispensaries where you meet people with very limited access to care. Those places taught me to be flexible in treatment planning, sometimes using Panchakarma, other times just simple herbal meds and diet tweaks. I handle digestive issues, joint pain, stress-related disorders, metabolic imbalances, preventive care... and honestly I enjoy switching between acute cases that need quick attention and long-term ones where you watch slow steady recovery. I also spend time with patient education—whether in community health programs or one-on-one—because when someone really understands their condition, they stick with the plan better. My approach is kind of a mix of being attentive and direct, but also practical. I’ll adjust things if I see they’re not working, no ego about it. Learning never stops in this field, so I keep working on improving my diagnostic skills, deepening my knowledge of therapies, and fine-tuning the way I communicate treatments. At the end, my goal is simple: help people find a balance they can keep, not just for a week or two, but in a way that becomes part of how they live.