Dr. Komal Singh
Experience: | 4 years |
Education: | Madhya Pradesh Medical Science University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly into Ayurvedic maternity and women’s health care, and I’d say it kinda became my core focus over time. Like, from pregnancy support to menstrual disorders or postnatal recovery, I try to hold space for the whole journey—not just symptoms but what’s going on behind them. Using classical Ayurvedic therapies helps me bring more balance into things... whether it’s preparing the body for conception or helping it recover after delivery. Each patient reacts so diff, no two protocols work the same. And that’s where I rely on things like Abhyanga, yoni pichu, garbhasamskara preps—small things, but they create big shifts.
I also work a lot on infertility cases, many of them come after trying so many paths already. It’s never one fix, but with rasayana, diet work, stress-mgmt and bastis, results do come. Slowly but steady. Now apart from reproductive care, I’ve a deep interest in Ayurvedic aesthetics too. Clean skin, stronger hair, that inner glow—these things are important in daily confidence. I use herbal lepas, tailas, mukhalepas, even mild virechana sometimes for detox!! It’s not about fair skin or external looks—it’s how your system is working inside, and we treat from there.
If a woman’s hormones are off or digestion is weak, no facial is gonna help. That’s what I tell patients often. I also help people with seasonal detox plans, weight concerns, and things like dull skin or hairfall that’s become too common lately. Not every therapy suits everyone, I have to change approach based on prakriti and history... and yeah sometimes I miss an ingredient or write the wrong oil name lol. But overall, I’m very dedicated to slow, clean, natural healing and helping my patients feel really whole again. |
Achievements: | I am kinda quick at grasping new things and usually adjust fast when patient cases shift or come unexpected. Honestly I don’t really try to impress, but ppl often say they feel safe sharing stuff with me... maybe bcz I don’t interrupt or push them. I like keeping the vibe calm, like making them feel they're not being judged or rushed or lost in big ayurveda words. Empathy just matters a lot to me.
I’m also big on clear talk—sometimes just explaing a thing slowly, without too much jargon, makes them relax way more. I try to be alert about the little stuff too, like if someone avoids eye contact or hesitates with words, it kinda signals me to go softer. I don’t think healing is just herbs or panchakarma... its about trust. Gotten good feedback many times—some patients call back just to thank or update. That makes this feel worth it every time. |
I am someone who kinda walks between two paths in Ayurveda—one foot in clinics, one in classrooms. I started out my practice at Shanta Nursing Home, was there for six months. Short but really full of patient interaction n learning how actual ayurvedic treatments play out beyond theory. Then came Jeevan Jyoti Maternity Hospital—spent 2 years there diving deep into women’s health, maternity care, and gyne conditions where Ayurveda really has a lot to offer. A lot of cases weren’t textbook perfect, you learn to adapt, to listen, to re-evaluate herbs and panchakarma plans depending on the tiniest patient feedback... that part really stayed with me. I’ve also been in teaching for over 3 yrs now. First year was at NRI College of Ayurveda—there I was takin’ lectures, case-discussions, and somehow trying to keep classical texts alive in young brains that are half on social media 😅 Currently, I’m at SRK College of Ayurveda for 2.5 years. Still teaching. Still learning. Still balancing both sides of this world. It’s funny how teaching others actually sharpens your own clinical clarity—I noticed I became way more systematic with my diagnosis once I had to explain it to someone else. Now, in terms of clinical scope, I’m mostly into chronic and lifestyle-related issues. Whether its PCOD or long-standing gastritis or sleep troubles or even just low energy complaints—Ayurveda gives this flexibility to mold the line of treatment around the person not the disease name. That’s the part I enjoy most. A tailored therapy feels more alive, like it respects the patient’s full story, not just their symptoms. Maybe that’s what I really do—blending experience from both wardrooms and lecture halls to give something a bit more holistic, more humane. I still mess up spellings in prescriptions sometimes, I still need to revise slokas before teaching—but yeah, I love what I do, and I care a lot about making it matter, esp. for people who don’t always fit the usual pattern.