Dr. Ayushya Kumar Singh
Experience: | 4 years |
Education: | Govt Dhanwantri Ayurvedic Medical College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on classical Panchakarma—Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya, and Raktamokshan… each one needs its own timing and depth, depending on who's sitting across from me. I don’t just pick protocols randomly—everything’s kinda tailored from pulse readings, prakriti-vikriti check and lifestyle cues ppl dont even notice sometimes. I do work a lot with chronic stuff—arthritis, sugar issues, PCOS, skin things like eczema or acne, and gut problems that just linger forever.
A big chunk of my energy goes toward women’s health too—menstrual irregularities, infertility struggles, or just making sense of the body again post-menopause... Ayurveda’s pretty layered with that. Herbal meds I use are mostly customized—referencing the granthas n patient’s own digestion n mental state. I also use dinacharya & ritucharya planning—not everyone sticks to it perfectly but even small shifts matter. For mental health I use sattvic principles, some Ayurvedic psych concepts (yeah they exist), for stuff like anxiety, sleep troubles n low mood cycles. Healing’s not just one organ—it’s the whole thing moving better together. |
Achievements: | I am really thankful I got the chance to run a bunch of free Ayurvedic health camps in remote areas where access is just… not really there. These camps weren’t just checkups—they kinda turned into spaces for early diagnosis, prevention, and honestly, education too. People came with chronic stuff they’d ignored for years or just didn’t know wht to do about. I tried making it less formal, more like, let’s talk & figure things out. For me this is part of what Ayurveda’s all about—real reach. |
I am someone who got into Ayurveda not just for treating diseases but cuz I always felt drawn to understanding why things go out of balance in the first place. My work’s rooted in classical Ayurvedic texts—I’ve spent years studying them, not just memorizing shlokas but really figuring out what they mean in today’s context. At the same time, I also use modern diagnostic stuff where needed, just to get a fuller picture. Pulse diagnosis (Nadi Pariksha) is something I rely on a lot—it’s not easy to master but with practice, it kinda tells you what the body’s hiding, even before symptoms scream out loud. I focus mostly on chronic issues… like gut problems, fatigue, hormonal mess, skin disorders, and stress stuff that just doesn’t go away with tablets. I use herbal formulations (mostly customized), Panchakarma when needed—not in a one-size way but actually based on the person’s Prakriti and Vikriti. I also spend a good chunk of time explaining things to patients. Like why you should eat this in winter, or skip curd at night or not mix fruits with milk—little stuff people think doesn’t matter, but actually does in Ayurveda. Over time, I’ve realized people don’t just want relief, they want to understand how their body works again. That’s kinda where I feel most useful. I help patients reconnect with natural rhythms, daily routines, sleep cycles, digestion, seasons—all of it. And ya, it’s slow sometimes. But once things shift internally, you see it show up on the outside too. That’s what keeps me going honestly. Whether it’s stress or sluggish metabolism or just someone feeling “not right” without knowing why—I try to listen deep, go to the root n create a treatment path that’s realistic and sustainable. Not just ideal on paper. Healing, for me, is something we do together, not something I just hand over. I want people to feel heard n understood… and to believe their bodies can heal, with the right support. That’s what Ayurveda is to me—real, ancient, and still totally alive.