Dr. Poonam Baburao Raut
Experience: | 10 years |
Education: | B.A.M.S, (Maharashtra University of Health Sciences).
GOVERNMENT AYURVED COLLEGE NAGPUR. |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into treating chronic skin issues—like eczema, psoriasis, pigmentation, all that tricky stubborn types, though i also handle acute ones too when they flareup bad. A lot of my focus is around vata rogas too, especially joint pain, frozen shoulder, neuro weakness... anything that comes under that neuromuscular umbrella. I see a good number of urinary tract related complaints (mutravaha vikara types), esp in long term cases where symptoms kinda keep coming back no matter what. And yeah, women’s health—Stree Roga, PCOS, cycle problems, hormonal imbalances—that’s a huge part of my daily work.
I usually go back to classical diagnosis, not the lab reports alone, trying to read the dosha patterns and agni status. Diet and herbs are basic but it’s the panchakarma that gives long term hold if done right. Not every case needs full detox tho—sometimes it’s more about rhythm n' repair. Every patient is different. No copy paste stuff here. |
Achievements: | I am honestly not big on awards n all, but if there’s one thing I keep close—it’s patients telling me they feel “seen” or like, properly heard during treatment. That means more to me than a certificate. My biggest achievement really is watching ppl slowly come back to themselves… like less pain, clear skin, normal periods, or digestion finally settling after years of upset. If their well-being improves, even a bit, that’s kinda all that actually matters to me in the end. |
I am someone who’s walked through both sides—classical Ayurvedic setups and critical care units. I’ve spent over 5 years in clinical practice now, out of which around 2 years were pretty much neck-deep in critical care stuff. That kinda changed the way I see patient care... not just about herbs or shodhana or slow healing anymore. It’s about timing, clarity, and being able to respond when the case gets serious or unpredictable. My Ayurvedic roots still go deep—treating stuff like diabetes, thyroid probs, PCOS, cholesterol, BP, weight issues... all that lifestyle imbalance spectrum. Plus a lot of chronic pain, skin diseases, fatigue syndromes and such where western meds usually just keep symptoms floating. I do rely on Panchakarma when needed, but not blindly—depends on avastha, dosha and patient’s own strength. And prakriti-vikriti mapping? non-negotiable for me. That’s where half of the diagnosis sits. Being part of ICU & hospital settings earlier gave me a kinda edge—I don’t panic with complex cases or multi-drug scenarios. I know when Ayurveda can take lead, and when to support what modern docs are doing. Sometimes, people come in middle of their allopathy journey—looking for support, or a backup. I’m okay with that. Not everyone wants to go all-in from day one. I also focus lot on preventive care, long-term wellness plans, & most days, just basic education. Like explaining to someone why they have reflux every night, or why their PCOS flares every few months, based on what their own system is saying. Not easy... but worth it when patients start noticing real shifts. My goal? To make Ayurveda practical, sharp, and useful—even in high-pressure or fast-changing medical situations. That balance is hard but I guess that’s exactly what makes it matter.