Dr. Vishal Kumar
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | B.A.M.S, (Guru Ravidas Ayurveda University, Hoshiarpur). |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into working on chronic-type health problems that don’t just go away with one round of meds. My way of treating is rooted in core Ayurvedic priciples—but also real life stuff like diet, sleep, work habits, stress... the whole picture. I use herbal formulations a lot, and where needed I plan Panchakarma too, but I only suggest what actually fits that person, not just the textbook dosha logic.
Lately I’ve been seeing a lot of skin-related issues—acne, eczema, even scalp disorders, and also hormonal imbalances like PCOD, thyroid shifts, etc. Some digestive things too—like bloating or constipation that just keeps coming back. And of course chronic pain... people with body stiffness, back aches, fatigue that doesn't make sense even after rest. My aim’s not just to suppress symptoms but to understand the samprapti, the full disease pathway.
Most of my patients are just looking for relief that lasts—not quick fixes—and I try to support that through tailored routines, dinacharya, seasonal regimens, simple yoga advice, n by helping them reconnect with how thier body signals change. Healing’s slow sometimes, but it works if it's real. |
Achievements: | I am working as an Ayurveda consultant right now and kinda focused mostly on treating chronic stuff—like conditions that don’t just get better with some pills. I try to understand the prakriti & vikriti properly before jumping into treatments. Like sometimes people have totally opposite symptoms but same diagnosis?? That’s where Ayurveda helps. I usually go with herbal combinations, a bit of diet fix here & there, sometimes panchakarma if body actually needs it. Every plan's built from scratch basically. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with around 2 years of hands-on clinical practice, though honestly it feels like I’ve been living inside case papers, herbs, and pulse readings for a lot longer. Most of my work revolves around skin n hair issues—like acne that doesn’t budge, sudden hairfall, dandruff that keeps coming back—and then hormonal stuff too, like PCOD or missed periods. Also joint pain cases... mostly stiffness types, but sometimes even early arthritic stuff. When someone comes to me, I don’t jump into “fixing” right away... I start slow—what’s their prakriti, what’s the lifestyle story, are they eating at the right time?—and try to figure out what’s actually pushing the imbalance. I use a mix of internal meds, Panchakarma if needed, but mostly dietary shifts, routines, and dravyas that suit their current state. Every treatment I give kinda flows from that deeper root cause angle... not just what they’re feeling, but why now, you knw? A lot of what I do is linked with Dravyaguna—understanding herbs not as just ingredients, but like who they are, what gunas they carry. That part excites me. And somewhere in all this, I also find myself talking a lot about routine. People forget that dinacharya isn’t a rulebook. It’s like—a way to bring back rhythm when the body’s lost track. I try to give patients not just herbs, but explanations. Because unless they get why the breakout or bloating or irregularity started, they won’t know how to stop it from happening again. Whether it’s a teenager dealing with oily skin or someone stuck in that PCOS loop—I want to help them connect the dots. It’s not flashy, but slowly... it helps. And that’s kind of the work I want to keep doing.