Dr. Revathi Bhat
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Sushruta Ayurveda Medical College and Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly into Panchakarma, pain relief stuff, obesity care and also yoga healing—kind of a full circle approach to what our bodies really need when things go off track. My main focus is helping ppl detox in a way that's not just some trendy cleanse but proper deep reset, using classical Panchakarma steps that actually match their prakruti. And yeah it takes time... not everyone wants slow healing, but honestly? slow works better.
Obesity is one of those things where I feel like people try everything but miss the basics—metabolism, ama buildup, wrong eating windows. I guide with herbal support, food habits, yoga that suits their energy and mobility, and really just bring them back to balance at their pace. Same with pain—like spine stiffness, joint swelling, or just general body heaviness, we go deep with abhyanga, swedana, basti etc. I mix it with yoga therapy too where needed, slow stretches, breathing—whatever makes the body feel safe again.
Main thing I belive in is root cause fixing, not patchwork. And yes, lifestyle’s always part of the plan. What you eat, when u sleep, how much you move—all that counts big time. I keep my treatments flexible, always adjusting with what the patient’s system needs in that moment. The goal is to make them feel heard, guided and more in control of their health—bit by bit. |
Achievements: | I am really proud to have recieved the Excellence Award in Ayurveda & Yoga—it kinda felt like a nod to the path I choose, mixing classical Ayurved work with therapeutic yoga in real practice, not just theory stuff. It wasn't about some big flashy moment but more about day-to-day consistency, trying to really help ppl heal with things that actually work long-term. This award reminded me why I care about blending old wisdom with modern living habits. Means a lot. |
I am Dr. Revathi Bhat—Ayurveda physician and also a certified yoga coach (YCB), and tbh I really do believe that healing shouldn’t feel disconnected from real life. My BAMS background gives me the strong clinical base in Ayurved, but honestly it’s the mix of daily-practice wisdom + yoga + listening closely to what a patient’s body actually needs that kinda defines how I work now. Most of the ppl who come to me are dealing with lifestyle mess—like diabetes, PCOD, obesity, skin issues, digestion going all over the place, or some nagging urinary thing that won’t go away. And yeah, the symptoms show up on the surface, but underneath it's usually stress, bad routines, food habits, or just... disconnection from body signals. That’s where Ayurveda helps and where Yoga fits in—because you can’t always fix it with meds alone. I use a combo of herbs, panchakarma when needed, meal-tweaks, and simple daily routines (plus yoga breathwork or movement when it fits). Everything’s super personalized, based on prakruti, agni status, even the season. Like, there’s no point telling someone to do fancy cleanses or asanas if they’re not sleeping well or skipping lunch everyday. It’s really about making healing doable—not just ideal on paper. I do most of my consults online now—patients from all over. And I actually like it... because ppl open up more in their own space, and we can make long-term changes step by step. What I care most is that the care doesn’t stop when symptoms fade. Like, let’s fix it at the root and make sure you know what to do next time it tries to come back. Preventive care's also a big part—teaching ppl about seasonal changes, dinacharya bits, small habits that actually last. Because chronic issues don’t start overnight... they build, quietly. My job? help ppl catch it early and guide ‘em back into balance—not just physically but in lifestyle n mind too. And that, I think, is what real healing kinda means.