Dr. Atul Goswami
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Vaidya Yagya Dutt Sharma Ayurved Mahavidyalaya |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am a general physician but honestly I just think of myself as someone who listens—really listens—to people’s health problems, no matter how big or small they are. I deal with all kinds of stuff every day—things like fevers, headaches, stomach bugs, coughs, or long-term issues like diabetes or high BP that kinda sneak up on people with time. I see patients of all age group, and each one comes with a different story, different concern—sometimes even things they don't know how to explain fully, and that’s okay. That’s kinda where I step in.
I try not to rush through any consult, even when the day’s crazy. Clinical accuracy matters to me a lot—figuring out what's actually going wrong, not just throwing meds at it and hoping for the best. I use proper diagnostics, always—no guess work there. But I also think healing isn’t all labs and tests. I explain things in a way that makes sense to them, cause if patients don’t understand their condition, they can’t really take control of it either, right?
Lifestyle issues are a big deal lately. I’m seeing more young people with sugar and pressure problems than ever before. I work with them to plan better habits, not just prescriptions. Preventive care is something I keep trying to emphasize... although yeah, not everyone takes it seriously till something go wrong :/
End of the day, my job’s not just about fixing illness, it's about helping people stay well, stay steady. And trust me that takes time, effort, and sometimes just being available for that one small question they’re scared to ask. |
Achievements: | I am a BAMS grad who's always kinda leaned toward community work, like actually being there where people need help, not just in clinics. I worked with NGOs like Spread Happiness Club in Sitapur—small setups but big impact types. Right now I’m with Jan Kalyan Seva Ashram Samiti in Dehradun, trying to make Ayurved reach folks who don’t get to it easily. These expereinces just made my roots stronger in holistic, no-fuss care that's grounded in what patients really need not just what's on paper. |
I am someone who really believes that the body can heal itself—if we just give it the right support at the right time. At Kaya Bandhu Ayurvedic Clinic, I try to follow that thought in every case I handle. I work mostly with classical Ayurvedic tools, not just for treatments but for actual diagnosis too—like Nadi Pariksha, Prakriti checks, and Rogi-Roga Pariksha... that kind of deep-rooted stuff that shows what’s really going on inside. Not just the symptoms, but where they’re coming from. I focus a lot on lifestyle conditions—things like high BP, diabetes, insomnia, skin flares, gut issues, arthritis, thyroid troubles or even post-covid fatigue. I’ve seen that if you don’t look at the root doshic imbalance, those things just keep bouncing back. I usually go with a mix of Panchakarma (which really clears things at a deep level), Rasayana therapies for long-term tissue support, and individualised herbs and ahara-vihara tweaks that match the patient’s own prakriti—not just generic solutions. I’ve had patients who came in with hormonal imbalances like PCOS or menopause shifts and they’d already tried so many things. But when we started aligning their food, daily rhythm, internal meds, their energy actually changed. Sometimes it’s small changes like how or when they eat, sometimes we go full detox and reset—it depends. I don’t think everyone needs the same path. I also spend time explaining things to patients—not just telling them do’s and don’ts but why certain herbs or timings matter. I think that matters a lot, especially now when people are trying to make better health choices but are just overwhelmed. My vision with Kaya Bandhu is honestly simple—keep it authentic, make it patient-first, and always stay grounded in Ayurvedic wisdom even if we are living in a crazy fast-paced world. Every patient is different, their healing pace is different too. I just try to meet them where they are and walk that path with them, one step at a time... nothing fancy, just real, ethical Ayurvedic care that makes sense and actually helps.