Dr. Sakshi
Experience: | |
Education: | Shri Krishna AYUSH University |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on helping ppl deal with chronic or stubborn conditions like PCOD, periods going all over the place, eczema flareups, acidity—those things that don’t go away easily & keep coming back. My work centers around Ayurvedic gynecology, skin, gastric, respiratory & urinary care. I use classical protocols but adjust things based on prakruti and how the person actually feels day-to-day, not just what’s on paper, you know?
Sometimes the problem shows up on the skin, but really it's from the gut, or stress or hormones, or vitiated doshas that no one’s noticing. That’s where Ayurveda shines—it looks at all layers. Like for asthma or UTI, I don’t just treat the symptoms. I go deeper—agni state, srotas, ojas, even diet patterns they grew up with... that all matters a lot. My treatment always have herbal combos that I adjust for each person, sometimes panchakarma or detox if needed, and small but powerful life changes—like shifting wake-up time or how they eat dinner.
I don’t belive in rigid protocols. I listen a lot, change plans mid-way if it’s not working, and really just try to meet ppl where they are, while still holding the Ayurvedic line. Healing has to be realistic & rooted, else it won’t last. |
Achievements: | I am kinda proud to say I was awarded the Gold Medal during my MD in Ayurveda, specalized in Kriya Sharir (yep, that’s the physiology side of Ayurveda). That meant a lot to me—not just grades or marks, but that someone saw my effort to really get how the body works acc to the texts. I was always drawn to the deeper logic of doshas, dhatus, agni... and how they show up in modern clinical cases, which isn’t always straghtforward. I guess that’s what kept me pushing myself. |
I am an MD Gold Medalist in Ayurveda, did my PG from Institute for Ayurveda Studies & Research in Kurukshetra. That place’s part of Shri Krishna Ayush University—it's actually the first proper AYUSH university in India, kinda cool to be part of something that pioneering. During my studies I was really drawn to the deeper layers of Ayurveda, not just the texts or protocols but how the logic behind Doshas, Prakriti, and Samprapti can actually guide modern clinical work if you let it. From day one, my goal wasn’t just grades or gold medals (though yes, I got that too), but to be solid in clinicals—like knowing how to sit with a patient and actually figure things out beyond the obvious. I learned how important it is to look beyond symptoms. You know, everyone talks about root cause, but in Ayurveda that actually means something, and it takes time to train your eyes to see that in a real patient. That’s where I found myself leaning hard into things like chronic illness, metabolic disorders, gut stuff, even cases where no clear diagnosis was made before. I kept coming back to this idea—every patient’s different. Prakriti, Agni, Ojas, stress... the layers are endless and that’s what makes Ayurveda real to me. I worked a lot on making treatment plans that were actually doable, not just textbook-perfect. Panchakarma, Rasayanas, pathya-apathya, even little tweaks in lifestyle—those things can change lives if used right, you know? And I still follow that. I’m all about customising care, not giving some “one-size fits all” protocol. I’m trying to bridge old-school Ayurveda with today's patient needs. That means staying up with research, being honest when something's not working, and always listening more than I talk. Health isn’t just about herbs or therapies—it’s how people live, eat, move, think... and I try to include all that in treatment. If you’re looking for evidence-informed Ayurveda that respects the old but gets the now—I’m here for that.