Dr. Bhavyashree R
Experience: | |
Education: | B.A.M.S, (Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences, Benguluru). |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly focused on holistic Ayurvedic care—meaning I don’t just treat the disorder, I look at how the imbalance got there in first place. My work often involves figuring out what stage the disease is in n what’s the prakriti of the person… not just what dosha is involved, but also how their lifestyle is playing into it. I recommend Panchakarma, but only when it fits that person's condition—like sometimes Basti or Vaman help, but sometimes simpler things work better if timed right.
I’m trained in Kriyakalpa procedures too, which we use for eye issues or ENT problems—stuff like Netra Tarpana or Karnapurana which are classical but really effective when done right. And I do spend time guiding people on dinacharya, ritucharya, yoga practices—not in a textbook way, more like what actually fits their routine n energy levels. It’s not just about giving herbs, it's about rebalancing through small but steady lifestyle nudges. |
Achievements: | I am someone who kinda always liked digging deeper into the why behind a symptom, and maybe that’s why I finished my BAMS with distinction—it wasn’t just about marks, I genuinely got into the logic of Ayurveda. Along the way, I went to quite a few seminars on clinical methods, treatment lines, new case approaches... those things actually opened up more ways of thinking, ya know? Helped me see how disease maangement isn’t always linear. You learn, unlearn, and stay curious. |
I am just starting out really—I finished my BAMS in Sept 2024 and right now I’m in the middle of my internship phase, which honestly is turning out to be the most eye-opening part of all this. All the stuff we studied—theory, shlokas, treatment protocols—suddenly it hits different when you're actually with real patients, real complaints, and real-time pressure to understand what’s going on under the surface. During my academics I found myself kinda drawn toward the core concepts—prakriti, agni, dosha balance, that whole deeper mapping of how a person functions. I liked how Ayurveda doesn’t rush to fix one symptom but tries to read the entire story, their lifestyle, food, stress, digestion, sleep, everything—like puzzle pieces. Now through OPD/IPD postings, I’m actually applying that thinking, slowly. Whether it’s a skin rash or IBS or someone who walks in complaining of joint pain, we’re taught to pause and think—what is their agni doing? Is vata running wild? Are they ignoring ritucharya? My hands-on exposure is mostly with procedures like abhyanga, nasya, basti—been assisting seniors during Panchakarma sessions. Also getting better at Nadi Pariksha and just reading case patterns… sometimes still get stuck, not gonna lie. But the seniors guide and the patients teach you without realizing. I'm also super interested in how daily routine (dinacharya), seasonal shifts (ritucharya), and even simple sadvritta practices can reset the body gently without meds even. Every patient I see makes me realize that learning Ayurveda isn’t just books and herbs—it’s about listening, observing, and slowly building the right habits that fit that one individual. Right now I'm absorbing as much as I can—sitting in case discussions, helping during rounds, trying to connect all the classical dots with what we actually see on ground. It's hard sometimes but also pretty amazing when things click.