Dr. K.R. Neha
Experience: | |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health and Science |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am done with my MD in Kayachikitsa in 2025 and ya—my whole focus really is on how to manage chronic stuff and lifestyle mess in a more root-cause kind of way. I mostly work with metabolic troubles, like diabetes or obesity (sometimes they come as a combo, right?), autoimmune flares, weird gut symptoms that don’t show on scans, even stress-driven sleep n skin issues. Not everything's a textbook case honestly—some folks respond to basic detox, some need deeper Rasayana work.
My approach? always depends on who’s in front of me. I don’t use ready-made lists. Instead, I go back to classical Ayurvedic tools—prakriti analysis, vikriti reading, samprapti mapping... then decide on personalized herbal meds or Panchakarma protocols. Sometimes just tweaking sleep + food habits do the trick, but other times we gotta do Virechana or Basti too.
I believe healing kinda needs layering—you can’t just treat the dosha and ignore the lifestyle that fed it for years, right? That’s why I keep my plans flexible, patient-driven & realistic (no crash rules or overnight miracle stuff). Every case is like a puzzle and I'm honestly still learning with each one... figuring how old wisdom fits into today's patient life. |
Achievements: | I am done with Certified Yoga Studies from Dharwad University, and that really changed how i see healing. It’s not just about herbs or massage or even diet—like, yoga kinda stitched everything together for me. I now use those therapeutic postures + breathwork along with the Ayurvedic part, which honestly? helps patient respond better esp. in things like anxiety, spine issues n digestion mess. The mix feels more complete somehow.. less patchy. And ya, I keep learning how to fine-tune that blend. |
I am working as an AYUSH Medical Officer under NHM for about 1.5 years now at Taluka Hospital, Sakleshpur... and honestly it’s been kinda intense but very grounding too. I deal with a wide mix of cases—acute ones, lifestyle troubles, respiratory flare-ups, musculoskeletal pain, and a bunch of women's health complaints—most of which respond well when you go all in with classical Ayurvedic treatment, panchakarma, and like, solid follow-up. My role wasn't just about sitting in the OPD n prescribing churnams. I actually had to manage full-scale patient assessments, make sense of their prakriti-vikriti mix, customize their therapies (esp for dosha-related imbalances), and keep track of outcomes. I mean, real life don’t always look like textbook stuff, right? Sometimes you'd mix Shamana with some detox or just fix their diet first. And yeah—handling all that within a gov't hospital setup with 40-50 patients daily?? not exactly easy but definetely shaped how I think and treat. I worked with a full team—docs from allopathy, nurses, sometimes lab techs—coordinating for emergency care n public health drives. Did a good number of community camps too. Like, getting out there and talking to people about Ayurveda basics—was rewarding in its own way. Education is super underrated... it helps more than half the time just to make someone understand their health problem. This phase really tought me how to adapt—blend tradition with modern health needs, and still stay rooted in the classics. I care a lot about giving personalized care. Like, I don’t just treat the diagnosis, I try seeing the person behind it. And that keeps me grounded, curious, sometimes worried too—but always learning.