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Dr. Vaidya Harsh
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Dr. Vaidya Harsh

Dr. Vaidya Harsh
Saksham Clinic
Doctor information
Experience:
8 years
Education:
Ayujyoti Ayurvedic College & Hospital
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am someone who’s really leaned into the more intense side of Ayurveda—mainly working with cancer care & infertility. I kno those two sound heavy n yep, they are. But I’ve seen how Ayurvedic protocols—when used right, at the right phase—can honestly make a big difference. For cancer, I don’t claim cures or shortcuts, but I focus on integrative support like Rasayana therapy, herbal routines, and simple detox stuff that helps ppl deal better with chemo, fatigue, or just day to day pain. With infertility, my approach’s more long-term. I rely a lot on classical methods—things like Panchakarma, Garbhasanskar support, diet based on dosha state, and getting the Agni right. Hormones don’t fix overnight, but when the system begins to align, conception often follows naturally. I try to explain this upfront—what to expect, what not to. Every patient’s different. That’s why even if two cases look same from outside, the plan won’t be. I tweak it based on history, mental state, n prakriti. Healing’s personal.
Achievements:
I am trained in Panchakarma & have done loads of hands-on work with it—not just textbook but actually handling therapies like Vamana, Basti, Nasya etc. Working this close with ppl helped me realize how deep detox can reset the whole body-mind system. It’s not just about removing toxins, like ppl often think, but about rebalancing doshas in ways that stay long-term. I’ve worked on cases where digestion, hormones, joint pain—things shift after Panchakarma if done right. That’s kinda become my main strength.

I am an Ayurvedic doctor with more than 7 yrs in clinical practice, and honestly—each case still teaches me something new. I mostly focus on patient-first kinda care, where I don’t just treat the symptom n move on, but try to really get what’s happening underneath. Tools like Nidana Panchaka, Prakriti assessment, sometimes even just careful listening—it all adds up. I don’t rush diagnosis... coz every body talks differently, right? In these years I’ve seen a mix of conditions—chronic gut issues, fatigue that doesn’t go away, back pain, period problems, thyroid swings, anxiety that's hard to explain, even some complex metabolic things. I use classical herbs (many from the Samhitas) but pair it with diet shifts, daily habits, detox if needed—Panchakarma when its right. There’s always a role for Pathya-Apathya and the timing, season, mental state... all those subtle things. My work isn’t about one-size-for-all. I always try to tailor everything—down to what time the patient eats or wakes up—based on their Prakriti, season, and current imbalance. Some don’t realize how much Dinacharya can change their healing until they actually try. I talk a lot about that. I feel patient education is half the treatment itself... once they know why we’re doing a certain herb or routine, they stick better. What I’ve realised—healing’s slow sometimes. There’s no shortcut when you’re rebuilding from inside out. And it needs trust—both ways. You listen to the patient, and they begin to listen to their own body. That part's beautiful when it happens. Even now I keep updating myself... but I don’t chase trends. I stick to what aligns with Ayurveda's roots and matches today's lifestyle demands. Somewhere between ancient texts and today’s clinic chaos, I try to hold space where people can feel seen, not just cured.