Dr. Mohammad Faizan Siddiqui
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Vivek college of Ayurvedic Sciences and Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly focused on treating long-term health issues, especially things like diabetes and metabolic disbalances that just don’t go away easily. Most ppl come to me with complaints of high sugar levels, weight fluctuations, tiredness n other related symptoms... and it’s usually not just one thing going wrong. I try to go deeper, like understanding how their body is reacting to food, sleep or even emotions, because all that connects in Ayurveda.
Joint pains are another thing I see a lot—arthritis, back stiffness, cervical, knee issues, etc. These aren’t just aging problems, sometimes even young ppl get it due to wrong postures or poor gut. I use classical treatments and medicated oils, internal herbs, some diet changes n yoga bits if needed.
My other interest area is skin & hair. Stuff like eczema, acne flares, constant hairfall, dandruff—all that. I’ve seen how gut & hormones totally affect skin. Same goes with sexual and women health problems. Like PCOD, delayed cycles, pain issues or libido concerns—I don’t jump to detox for everyone but first understand prakriti-dosh imbalance and decide.
Also I help many with gas bloating acidity constipation—all common, but ppl often ignore until it gets chronic. Every plan is diff, based on how their doshas are behaving, what prakriti type, n what habits can be changed gradually. I keep things natural, no quick fixes or harsh meds. |
Achievements: | I am done with my BAMS in 2023 & since then kinda juggled different roles—some clinic based, some totally online (which’s whole diff vibe), and a good bit of writing too (health stuff, not random blogs lol). Doing Panchakarma hands-on one day n breaking down Tridosha for a patient over call the next—these shifts taught me a lot!! Each place, each patient adds layers. And yeah, content work helped sharpen how I explain Ayurveda to ppl without sounding too textbooky or vague. |
I am working in the field of Ayurveda from last few years, around 3+ yrs now, and honestly the journey’s taught me more than books ever could. I got to work with quite a mix of setups—NirogStreet, MyUpchar, Gorgeouss Atara, Dr. Monga Medi Clinic, Aksa Ayurveda—each one totally diff but gave me solid ground-level clinical exp that kinda reshaped how I understand patient care. I didn't just follow protocols, I had to see what's working and why. At MyUpchar and NirogStreet, online consultations made me rethink the way we connect with people—harder in some ways, but weirdly more personal too at times. It pushed me to explain things better, listen more carefully, and figure out how to build trust even on screen. I used those convos to craft custom treatment plans, balancing Ayurvedic classics with modern lifestyle tweaks—especially for folks dealing with digestion issues, hormone chaos, PCOS, stress burnout, and hair-skin flareups. Dr. Monga and Aksa gave me more complex, offline cases, real-world scenarios where I couldn’t just say "take this churnam". It was more—analyzing Dosha states, checking Prakriti-vikriti patterns, managing metabolic stuff like pre-diabetes, obesity or PCOD that don't show textbook behavior. Had to rely on pulse-reading, gut sense (literally and otherwise), and yeah, a fair bit of patient education too, coz if people don’t get what’s happening inside them, results don't last. Mostly, I use herbs, Panchakarma detox (only when needed tho—not overusing it), food timing, routines, even breathwork sometimes, all tailored to their body types. I’m not into one-size-fits-all stuff. Each plan’s personal and flexible…like if someone works night shifts or can’t quit coffee or lives alone—I keep that in mind while suggesting treatments. For me, Ayurveda’s not about just fixing disease.. it's more like guiding ppl back to their baseline. Not perfect health maybe, but balance. And yeah, I'm still learning every day through these exp’s, refining my approach, trying to go deeper into root-cause level care instead of just symptom handling. That’s kinda what keeps me at it.