Dr. Dev Prakash Dwivedi
Experience: | 18 years |
Education: | Devi Ahilya Vishwavidyalaya |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on working with gut stuff, joint pain and nerve-related troubles—some of them look physical but they’ve got deeper emotional or neuro origin, y’know? My practice usually involves folks with things like chronic acidity, IBS, rheumatoid-type arthritis, burning sensation down the legs or just random pain that moves around. I also treat mental health issues… anxiety, sleep disrptn, mood swings—where people don’t always realize it’s connected to digestion or doshic imbalance till we dig a bit.
I use classical Ayurvedic therapies but honestly I don’t just follow shastra blindly—I build each treatment plan based on what that patient’s body n mind actually showing right now. Mostly mix of herbal meds, basic detox (sometimes panchakarma if they’re ready), and changes in food habits—nothing extreme, just doable tweaks. People usually think they need to “give up everything” to heal, but really it's more about right timing and rhythm than harsh rules.
Root-cause thinking’s always at the center of my work—not just hiding the symptoms and calling it progress. |
Achievements: | I am someone who honestly don’t talk much abt awards but yeah—being given the Best Achiever Award by Jiva Ayurveda meant a lot. it was more about being there for my patients consistently, not just one big moment. Also got the All-Time Service Provider title from Patanjali which kinda just reflected all those yrs across diff clinics n setups, helping people who walked in with such varied issues. Both those recognitions sorta pushed me to keep showing up & stay grounded in real Ayurvedic care. |
I am a practicing Ayurvedic physician with more than 15 years workin in clinical setups, mostly trying to make people actually feel Ayurveda—not just hear big words or get confused herbs. I spent around 10 years as a consultant across different Patanjali Chikitsalayas, which gave me the chance to meet patients from super diverse backgrounds… small towns, big cities, people with vata issues, some with ama stuck deep in the gut, even a few stubborn cases where digestion had crashed totally. I used to do a lot of prakriti-based counseling n panchakarma tailoring, just figuring out what works for that patient at that moment. No copy-paste therapy. Last 5 yrs I’ve been working at Jiva Ayurveda in Lucknow—probably the most enriching phase of my career, honestly. I’m doing deep-dive consults here for chronic stuff like IBS, fatty liver, stress that won’t go away, and lots of skin issues. Psoriasis, acne, urticaria—you name it. What I find useful is layering classical Ayurvedic frameworks with practical planning: like explaining dinacharya in a way someone with a 9-to-5 can actually do, or designing herbal combos that’re effective and doable. I don’t believe in dumping long lists of rasayanas unless they really needed. My main thing? Root-cause focus. Always. Whether it’s thyroid dysfunction or anxiety masked as acidity, I like tracing the imbalance back to its start... not just quieting the symptoms. I’ve always leaned toward personalized care, which means talking, listening properly, tweaking protocols mid-way if needed. And I do think empowering people makes all the diff—I mean once they “get” their own doshic tendencies or digestive strength, they naturally choose better stuff for themselves. I’m deeply rooted in classical texts, but not stuck there either. Ayurveda has to work now, in 2025. Whether someone wants disease prevention, hormonal balance or relief from fatigue or just some clear-headedness—I try to meet them where they are and walk the path with them. Not above them.