Dr. Subhadra V
Experience: | 6 years |
Education: | Ayurveda Vachaspati, (M.D- Ayurveda). |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working with chronic issues—like arthritis, carpal tunnel, lower back stiffness, those kinda long-drawn musculoskeletal cases that don’t always respond to regular meds or physio. And then there’s the gyne part—I see a lot of PCOD, period irregularities, pain that’s not really explained elsewhere. Honestly, half of it links back to digestion or hormones out of whack, at least from what I’ve noticed.
Skin cases come a lot too. Psoriasis, eczema, random itches or rashes that flare with stress or weather—they’re tricky but Ayurveda gives us ways to track the root dosha thing going on underneath, not just apply a cream and hope. Hair fall, premature greying, even alopecia—those are also part of what I look into.
I do work a lot with metabolism & gut. Think sluggish digestion, acidity, bloating, IBS kinds—where routine modern tests show “normal,” but ppl still feel off. That’s where deeper ayurvedic assessment helps. Mostly I use herbs, diet tweaks, panchakarma (if really needed), and small daily habits that kinda reset things. Nothing too fancy, but it works when it’s all put together right. |
Achievements: | I am usually curious abt expanding my scope... like I’ve gone thru CME sessions, done a couple extra training too—one in AABHA for Ayurvedic cosmetics prep and another in ortho pain mangement. I mean pain cases really need precision. I also do attend seminars, national & inter’national when I can catch them. One time my thesis got best presentation award at college—it was unexpected tbh but kinda gave me a push to keep sharing ayurveda in practical, evidence-wise ways. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with just over five years now in clinical practice—feels like a lot more somedays when I think about the range of cases I’ve seen. From stubborn digestive troubles to recurring skin flares or things like stress insomnia and PCOD... you kind of start seeing patterns but also realizing no two patients are ever the same. That’s where the individualized part kicks in. I usually spend time trying to understand the whole picture—prakriti, daily habits, how they eat, think, what’s bothering them emotionally (even if they don’t say it at first). I work a lot with lifestyle disorders—obesity, hormonal imbalances, fatigue, acidity, eczema, joint issues. Chronic things mostly. And it’s not like one magic herb or panchakarma can solve all. It takes a mix—Ayurvedic medicines, detox when needed, rasayana if the body’s too depleted, but also small shifts—like food timings, how someone breathes or sleeps. That’s where you start seeing real shifts. My training’s rooted in classical Ayurvedic texts, but I also like keeping things practical. If a patient’s not going to cook elaborate meals or follow rigid routines, no point prescribing them right? I try making it all work around their life, not against it. Most people just want to feel better without side effects, without pills piling up. And yeah, I focus a lot on gut health + immunity too—feels like half the issues begin there anyway. There’ve been tough days of course—like when nothing seems to click or someone’s body doesn’t respond right away—but that’s where patience and tracking helps. Over time, the results do come. I think what patients appreciate is that they’re heard. That matters. Whether I’m helping someone detox, manage diabetes, or just get their cycle back on track, my aim is to keep it all grounded in real Ayurveda—not diluted shortcuts. And maybe bring in that small shift that stays for good, not just for a week