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Dr. Amar kawale
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Dr. Amar kawale

Dr. Amar kawale
AMAR POLYCLINIC KIWALE
Doctor information
Experience:
7 years
Education:
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am an Ayurvedic practitioner who leans deep into the classical side of things—like real text-based Ayurveda, not just surface level. I mostly focus on treating ppl with long-drawn health probs... stuff like joint stiffness, metabolism kinda off, gut issues that flare up without any clear trigger, and skin probs too. I start by figuring out their Prakriti—’cause honestly, without knowing that, you’re just guessing, right? I stick to the core idea of Nidana Parivarjanam, like cutting off the root cause first before rushing into meds. Most of my treatment flows around herbs, internal meds, sometimes full Panchakarma if its needed, but also small changes in dinacharya, food timing, even how ppl chew or sleep. And I do think prevention is not just a word—if you catch a patient early with good daily habits and diet corrections, lot of stuff never gets worse at all. It’s not flashy but it works. I’m not really into treating everyone the same way—what worked for one won’t always help the next. Ayurveda gives room to personalise and I use that freedom, even if it takes more time and convo with the patient. Results matter yeah, but how you get there—that matters too.
Achievements:
I am someone who keeps pushing myself to learn more—maybe too much sometimes but it helps. I did a Diploma in Emergency Med, plus certifications in Industrial Health n Occupatinal stuff, which kinda opened my view beyond clinic walls. Also got a Diploma in Ayurvedic Dermatology that honestly changed how I approach skin cases now. I do attend seminars—some national ones too—not just for certificates, but like to hear other docs talk real-world stuff we miss in books. Helps me rethink lot of things.

I am working as a general physician right now at Amar Polyclinic in Kiwale, Pune—and honestly, the journey to this point’s had its ups and lot of learning curves. I started off with my internship at NKJAMC, Bidar, where everything felt new and intense—early mornings, tons of patient interactions, figuring out how to not just read symptoms but actually listen to them, if that makes sense. That place really laid the ground for how I now approach primary care. Not just as "treat and discharge", but more like—understand the person behind the symptoms. After that I spent 2 years at Vishwa Hospital. Busy setup, lots of OPD and IPD flow. That’s where I really started feeling comfortable managing day-to-day stuff—chronic cases, infections, basic diagnostics, but also just... connecting with patients better. Then came Woodland Hospital, a smaller stint but with higher complexity. 1 year there exposed me to critical cases—emergency medicine, complications, things that needed quick decisions but calm hands. Honestly, kinda shaped my reflexes. But I’d say the real game-changer was Medicover Hospital, Hyderabad. Spent 4 years there, full-on exposure to multidisciplinary work. Working with specialists, handling referrals, managing both acute and chronic illnesses—diabetes, cardiac issues, asthma, viral fevers, whatever came thru the door. Patient load was heavy, which meant I had to stay sharp, trust my judgement, but also know when to refer or dig deeper. Also learned a lot about evidence-based practice there—using protocols, keeping up with newer updates. Now at Amar Polyclinic, my practice is more grounded. It’s about community care. People walk in with fevers, BP, sugar, gastric stuff or just confusion about meds—and I try to be that first point of clarity. I make it a point to explain things in simple words, share preventive advice too—not everything needs a prescription, right? Lifestyle matters. I focus on that a lot—specially with lifestyle diseases or seasonal problems.