Dr. Jyoti Babali
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working with chronic health cases—like diabetes, thyroid probs, skin things that just don’t go away no matter what ppl try. And yeah a big part of my focus is also on women’s health—PCOD, fertility struggles, irregular periods n all that. Ayurveda gives us tools to go deep into the root causes not just give temporary relief, which I think a lot of people really need right now. Every case is kinda different, right? so I never just follow a rigid plan. I look at their prakriti, dosha imbalance, digestion status... and from there build a full approach—herbal meds, dinacharya tweaks, food choices, panchakarma if needed. Especially with hormonal issues, I feel ppl are often not told why their body is reacting this way. That’s where I try to explain things better n give long-term tools, not just quick tips. Even with skin diseases, many times there's a deep gut or metabolic connection ppl miss. My goal really is to help ppl feel more in control of their health again, naturally! |
Achievements: | I am honestly still lil proud of finishing MD with 1st rank in my final yr at college – it was tough but worth it. Also one of my reserch articles got selected to be a chapter in a international book!! That felt huge for me, like maybe what we do in Ayurveda is finally getting seen at bigger platforms. For me, that kinda reinforced that yeah I wanna keep contributing—whether it's in clinic with patients or by writing stuff that gets others thinking too. |
I am working in Ayurveda past 2 years—feels short and long at the same time honestly. I juggle between being a Consultant Ayurvedic Physician and Assistant Professor, which means I'm in clinic treating real ppl and also in class teaching future docs, sometimes on the same day. That mix keeps me grounded. In practice, I mostly focus on lifestyle disorders, chronic stuff, metabolic imbalances—things like diabetes, fatigue syndromes, PCOS maybe, cases where ppl often come after trying 5 diff things that didn’t last. I lean heavily on classical texts but I don’t just copy-paste those old rules. Every plan I make is tweaked for that person—herbal drugs, diet, panchakarma, even the counseling part. As a teacher, I go deep into diagnostics and basic concepts—not just to sound smart but bcoz when students get the why, they’re way more confident with the how. Nadi Pariksha, dosha assessment, roga-marga... I try connecting those dots with modern issues. Also I realized that explaining complex stuff to students helped me talk better to patients too, like breaking things down in normal words. In both roles, I care a lot about root-cause thinking, not just quick fixes. Ayurveda for me is not just herbs and massages—it’s about shifting how a person lives, eats, breathes almost. Dinacharya and Ritucharya matter just as much as medicines. I push a lot for prevention also, coz why wait till body crash? Helping people understand their own systems better... feels worth it. Still learning, still refining, still curious honestly. Whether it’s a tough vata disorder or someone just tired of bloating and burnout—my job is to listen, think clearly, and act with purpose. And that mix of clinical + academic work keeps me on my toes, which I guess I like even when it's a bit much.