Our Team of Ayurvedic Experts — page 54
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Ayurvedic doctors
784
Consultations:
Dr. Shweta Sindagi
381
0 reviews
I am currently working as an Ayurvedic Consultant at Miracle Drinks Pvt. Ltd.—been here around two years now, though honestly it doesn’t feel that long. Day to day, I’m mostly talking to patients, understanding what’s going wrong underneath the surface, and helping them figure out a way forward with Ayurveda. Some people come in with chronic stuff they’ve tried everything for... gut problems, sleep issues, fatigue that just hangs around. Others have more modern lifestyle things—BP, hormonal mess, weight that won’t budge. And yeah, sometimes it's just general confusion about health, where nothing looks “wrong” in tests, but they *feel* off.
What I try to do is not jump to giving a long list of meds or strict diets. Instead, I sit with the patient’s prakriti, how they live, eat, think even—and then piece together a treatment that actually makes sense for them. I work with classical Ayurvedic principles, herbs, sometimes formulas from our own line, but it’s never just one-size-fits-all. What worked for someone else might totally flop for the next person. You have to look at the root cause—*always.*
At Miracle Drinks, besides doing consultations, I also help shape some of the wellness protocols we suggest, and yeah—sometimes I’m involved in the herbal formulation side of things too, which is pretty interesting. It’s not like I’m making the medicines myself, but we do discuss how certain combinations might work better for certain conditions.
Ayurveda for me isn’t just about treating illness—it’s this whole thing about balance. Prevention too. The more people can understand their own bodies, the less they’ll need to “fight” disease later. That’s something I try to bring into each consult. There’s no magic pill here. Just slow, clear, steady healing, if done right.
Dr. Anjali Sehrawat
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5
799
52 reviews
I am Dr. Anjali Sehrawat. Graduated BAMS from National College of Ayurveda & Hospital, Barwala (Hisar) in 2023—and right now I'm doing my residency, learning a lot everyday under senior clinicians who’ve been in the field way longer than me. It’s kind of intense but also really grounding. Like, it makes you pause before assuming anything about a patient.
During my UG and clinical rotations, I got good hands-on exposure... not just in diagnosing through Ayurvedic nidan but also understanding where and when Allopathic tools (like lab reports or acute interventions) help fill the gap. I really believe that if you *actually* want to heal someone, you gotta see the whole picture—Ayurveda gives you that depth, but you also need to know when modern input is useful, right?
I’m more interested in chronic & lifestyle disorders—stuff like metabolic imbalances, stress-linked issues, digestive problems that linger and slowly pull energy down. I don’t rush into giving churnas or kashayams just bcz the texts say so... I try to see what fits the patient’s prakriti, daily habits, emotional pattern etc. It’s not textbook-perfect every time, but that’s where the real skill grows I guess. I do a lot of thinking abt cause vs symptom—sometimes it's not the problem you see that actually needs solving first.
What I care about most is making sure the treatment is safe, ethical, practical, and honest. No overpromising, no pushing meds that don’t fit. And I’m always reading or discussing sth—old Samhitas or recent journals, depends what the case demands. My goal really is to build a practice where people feel seen & understood, not just “managed.” That's where healing actually begins, right?
Dr. Pooja Bhandare
324
0 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic Consultant with 14+ years of kinda intense but deeply rewarding clinical experience. My whole journey in this field started with a simple thought—how do we actually heal someone, not just fix what's visible but get to the root, you know? That’s why I’ve stuck closely to classical principles. I work a lot with Nadi Pariksha, Prakriti-Vikriti checks, and the Dashavidha framework... those tools aren’t outdated—they’re precise, if you really listen.
Most of the cases I see are chronic, and honestly layered. Digestive issues that go beyond acidity. Joint pain that’s not just wear and tear but linked with ama, agni, even unresolved mental load. Skin diseases that’ve cycled through steroids and are worse now. Stress, fatigue, PCOS, thyroid drifts, pre-diabetes—those lifestyle-type imbalances that need proper unpacking. And I try to do that slowly, carefully. Never rushed.
Panchakarma is my core area. I custom-plan Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Raktamokshana, and Nasya—not from some textbook chart, but from the person sitting in front of me. Because what looks like the same symptom in two people can have completely different root causes. Some need deeper shodhana, others respond to light samshamana first. You just have to see them fully. That’s the real diagnosis.
My patients range from young adults burning out way too early to elderly people trying to find some ease in movement again. And I always include diet advice—not the vague “eat healthy” stuff, but proper ahar-based protocols. Lifestyle restructuring, stress management, daily routine corrections... all those things that hold the therapy together.
What I believe in most? Not temporary fixes. Not masked symptoms. Real shifts. And that only comes when the person feels heard, when they’re part of the process—not just on the receiving end of it.
Some days are hard. Some treatments don’t land the way I hoped. But when healing does happen—and it feels deep, sustained—that’s the moment that keeps me going.
Dr. Neha Kothari
314
0 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic physician with 16+ years in this field—ya, feels strange saying that, coz the work still keeps evolving and every day’s different. Right now I’m an Associate Professor, been teaching for like a decade now, mentoring students, discussing shlokas, and also how to apply that deep Ayurvedic stuff to *actual* patient care, not just theory on paper.
But I’m not just stuck in academics—I keep seeing patients regularly, mostly chronic and lifestyle-based conditions like diabetes, stress-related issues, digestion problems. I’ve worked a lot with long-term cases where people are tired of allopathic patches n just want something more rooted, more sustainable. I try to make every treatment plan truly tailored—depending on prakriti, their past meds, what’s realistic for their routine etc. Holistic doesn’t mean vague—it means patient-specific, and that’s my approach.
Teaching also keeps my basics fresh. Like when I’m explaining dosha-vikruti concepts to students, I kinda start applying that logic better with patients too. Keeps me sharp. I attend conferences n seminars whenever possible, not just to teach but to learn from peers who are doing really incredible work in the Ayurvedic space too.
What matters most to me tho is staying grounded in classical Ayurvedic texts while still being practical about today's world. Patients don’t live in ancient India—they live now, and I want their care to feel *authentic*, but also do-able. That’s the line I try to walk—respecting the science, but adapting it to modern lives. Healing isn’t one-size-fits-all. I believe in slow, rooted, honest care that builds real change over time, not instant fixes.
Dr. Anubhav Jain
95
0 reviews
I am trained in Panchakarma through a certificate course from Dhule, and honestly that learning shaped a big part of how I approach patients now. Panchakarma is not just about detox as many think, it’s a deep reset for the body & mind when done right. During my course I spent a lot of time understanding the theory but also more importantly, the hands-on part – from preparing medicated oils to applying each therapy step with the right pressure, timing, even temperature of the dravya. You realise how much small details matter when you see a patient respond better just because you adjusted a step slightly. I work on designing personalised Panchakarma protocols for each case, whether it’s for chronic pain, digestive disorders, skin issues or stress-linked conditions. The course also taught me to see Panchakarma not as an isolated treatment but as part of a whole lifestyle correction plan, including diet, daily routine and mental health balance. Sometimes patients come thinking they just need one procedure, but end up finding relief in ways they didn’t even expect – like better sleep or reduced mood swings. That’s when you feel this therapy is more than physical cleansing, it’s a reset at multiple levels. I also make sure to explain each step to my patients, cause when they understand what’s happening, they trust the process more and follow the aftercare better. Dhule training gave me the confidence to combine classical Ayurvedic texts knowledge with the reality of how modern patients live, eat, and think. Maybe I still keep adjusting my approach each time, but that’s part of being in this field – learning from every person you treat, and letting that refine your skill day by day.
Dr. Tanvi Raikar
222
0 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic graduate who’s kinda obsessed with understanding people’s health in that deeper, root-cause way. not just fixing symptoms but really digging into what’s throwing the balance off in the first place. my work is all about keeping it authentic, sticking to the classical Ayurvedic principles while still making it fit the world we live in right now. I try to make each plan feel like it’s just for that one person – the herbs, the food guidance, even the little daily habits.
I learnt a lot not only from books but also sitting in with respected vaidyas like Vd Suvinay Damle, Vd Chandrakumar Deshmukh & Vd Pranav Bhagwat… each one had a totally different way of looking at dosha imbalance, prakriti reading, and matching medicines to what’s actually going on inside the patient. that mixed exposure really shaped how I think through a diagnosis, sometimes a bit slower because I like to be sure, but it helps.
In my consults – whether it’s someone struggling with a chronic thing, lifestyle troubles or just wanting to keep well – I focus on giving a clear path they can follow without feeling overwhelmed. I think empathy matters as much as the medicine, maybe more on some days. herbal remedies, food tweaks, lifestyle shifts… all tied together so they support each other.
I keep learning, hands-on and also by going back to the texts, plus case discussions – feels like there’s always another layer to Ayurveda. the bigger goal in my head is not just to treat, but to help in keeping this knowledge alive & useful in real healthcare today. it’s slow work, but I’m here for it.
Dr. Sahil Gahlawat
169
0 reviews
I am someone who's seen a lot of the intense side of medicine. Spent around 4 years working in ICU setups, right inside the chaos really, part of a critical care team where every second counts—honestly, that shaped a lot of how I see health n healing now. I was into everything from managing emergencies, stabilizing patients, dealing with trauma and just keeping a calm head when things went sideways. It wasn’t always smooth, lot of pressure, but that also taught me how crucial deep observation and fast thinking is.
But y’know over time I started noticing something.. like many of those critical cases came from long ignored issues—chronic stuff that wasn’t treated right or just got supressed over the years. That sort of pushed me to rethink the way we look at healing. Now I’m working as a consultant at Suddhi Ayurveda, trying to give more long-term and root-level care rather than just symptom control. I kinda mix that ICU instinct with Ayurvedic depth—sounds weird maybe, but for me it's real.
At Suddhi, I mostly focus on personalized Ayurvedic care, understanding dosha patterns, detox therapies and supporting people thru lifestyle-based corrections. Not everyone gets it right away, and not every case is textbook... but that’s fine, coz most people ain't textbooks either right?
Anyway, I keep learning everyday and try to stay grounded in both clinical reality and traditional wisdom. Still figuring things out, but I do care a lot about getting to the actual cause instead of just covering it up with quick fixes. Healing takes time, patience n trust—on both sides tbh. And I’m here for that kind of work.
Dr. Jai Narayan
265
0 reviews
I am a third-generation Ayurvedic doctor, and honestly that kind of legacy—it shapes you, whether you plan it or not. Ayurveda wasn’t something I picked up later in life, it was just... always there. Herbs on the shelf, people dropping by for remedies, that whole rhythm of natural healing running through my home. Over time, that turned into purpose, and now I work as a consultant physician at Atharv Ayurveda in Rohtak. Real patients, real stories, real responsibility. It’s not about quick fixes. I try to understand what’s actually disturbing someone’s system—be it diet, stress, lifestyle, or something deeper—and go from there.
At Atharv, I’ve dealt with all kinds of cases—digestive issues, skin stuff, joint problems, lifestyle disorders. You name it. And it's not just about prescribing a churnam or kwath and calling it a day. I really focus on tailored care—Panchakarma if the body needs that detox route, or just simple, grounded shifts in daily habits. Sometimes it’s all about timing, not just treatment.
One thing I keep coming back to is this: healing isn’t just physical. If someone’s mentally restless, emotionally off-balance, no herb alone’s gonna fix that. That’s where I feel Ayurveda truly shines—it looks at the *whole* person. I take that seriously. Maybe it's from watching my elders work with such care... maybe it’s just what feels right.
Anyway—my approach’s always been a mix of tradition and practicality. Use the wisdom passed down, but also adapt it to modern life, where people are constantly rushing or stressed or half-aware of what they’re doing to their own health. I’m here to slow that down, just a bit. Help them reconnect with their own body’s signals, you know? That part never gets old.
Dr. Sharukh Khan
140
0 reviews
I am someone who honestly just believes in showing up and doing the work—day after day, shift after shift, whether it’s ward rounds or ICU monitoring or health camp in some noisy schoolyard. I focus a lot on diagnosis accuracy and patient clarity—what’s going on, why it might be happening, and what we can actually do about it. Like, no vague talk... either we manage it or we refer it, no ego in that.
Most of my work till now has been around OPD, IPD, and ICU settings—I’ve handled ABG sampling, Ryle’s tube insertion, plus all the “small” things ppl skip over like proper charting and follow-ups that honestly build the backbone of good care. Interviewing patients, understanding the full symptom picture, explaining tests without jargon—that stuff matters too. I routinely interpret lab tests, and I do try to rely on evidence-based plans (tho yeah—sometimes experience does beat textbook logic).
Preventive stuff is part of my workflow too. I’ve worked on community drives—like child immunizations and basic public health awareness things—and somewhere along the line I realized clinical care’s just one part. Empowering the patient, giving them enough clarity to want to follow through... that’s another skill altogether. I keep things ethical. Confidential. But also warm... like, just human.
I guess what I’m trying to say is: I work hard to connect the dots. Between the lab values and the face in front of me. Between clinical guidelines and what a patient’s life actually allows. And maybe that’s where my real strength lies—bridging the gap between textbook medicine and real-world health.
Dr. Aditi Nanchahal Monga
188
0 reviews
I am Dr. Aditi and honestly—Ayurveda isn’t just my work, it’s kinda how I live n think. With over 16 years of clinical experience, I’ve seen how powerful classical Ayurveda can be when applied right. I don’t just treat a set of symptoms n move on—I spend time figuring out what actually started the issue. That root-cause approach has helped me manage so many chronic & lifestyle disorders, whether it’s something like hormonal issues, skin stuff, digestion going haywire, or constant joint pain that won’t let ppl rest properly.
I use tools like Nadi Pariksha, Prakriti & Dosha analysis to really understand what’s going on inside before deciding anything. I try to keep my consultations super personal, coz no two bodies or lives are same right? Treatment-wise, I mostly mix Panchakarma, Rasayana therapy, Pathya-Apathya diet corrections, and a whole lot of routine-related advice—like Dinacharya, Ritucharya or even simple breathing rituals when needed. Sometimes ppl think it's just herbs or massage, but there's wayyy more to this system when u actually go deep.
I’ve worked in clinical setups and also wellness centers—and that kinda gave me the flexibility to handle both serious disease cases n ppl just looking for healing without harsh meds. And I do like to stay updated through seminars and CE programs coz things keep evolving even in our field.
Ayurveda’s not a shortcut—it needs time and trust. But once it clicks, the healing is real and sticks around longer than any quick fix. That’s what I try to give every patient—a plan that fits them, their lifestyle, their body type. Helping ppl return to balance, not just health, that’s what makes this work matter to me.
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