Dr. Shubham Gangawane
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Maharashtra University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am working in integrative medicine where I try to balance both modern allopathy and classical Ayurved together—not as opposites but as complements. My strength is in understanding both—how pharmacology works, how diagnostics guide treatment, and also how Ayurvedic nidan n chikitsa gives you a bigger, deeper view of what’s really going on. I don’t believe in choosing one side blindly.
When I plan treatment, I look at the whole case... whether someone needs herbs, or a modern intervention or just changes in their ahar-vihar first. Sometimes it's a combination—like using modern tools for diagnosis n Ayurvedic meds for long-term correction. Or managing side effects from allopathy with natural support. I use classical concepts like dosha, agni, srotas—but I also keep one eye on the reports, scans, labs etc. Both help, if you know how to read them right.
My goal’s not to impress anyone with jargon—it’s to give ppl solutions that actually work for them. Whether it’s sugar control, acidity, joint pain, mood issues or even weird unexplained fatigue—each case needs its own mix. And that’s what I try to build. No one-size-fits-all. Just what works best, and feels sustainable. Healing doesn’t have to be confusing. Just needs clarity and balance. That’s where I come in. |
Achievements: | I am currently doing my MD in Pathology n honestly it’s making me look at health n disease in a whole new way. Every slide, every test—teaches me how much is going on behind just symptoms. It’s helping me link lab findings with real patient conditions better, especially when I think in Ayurvedic terms too. This study’s not just academic—it’s sharpening how I understand disease roots, n how to apply both lab data n Ayurvedic logic more precisely while planning treatment for each case. |
I am someone who genuinely believes healing doesn’t just start with medicine—it starts with a calm space, quiet attention, and feeling actually seen. When a patient walks in, I don’t just jump into symptoms. I listen, slowly. Watch how they speak, what they don’t say, where their energy feels stuck. As an Ayurvedic practitioner, my focus is always to understand the full picture... not just dosha or disease label, but what’s going on underneath it all. I approach each case with patience, n yeah—sometimes that means the consult takes a bit longer. But I’d rather go deep than just give something quick that won’t hold. Whether it's chronic fatigue, disturbed sleep, hormonal shifts or digestion issues, I always look for root-cause through Ayurvedic principles—agni, srotas, dhatu state, lifestyle and even emotional buildup. I don’t treat everyone the same. A herbal mix that works for one person with acidity might totally imbalance another. That’s why I personalise everything—right from food guidance to yoga suggestions to basic daily routines. And I’m careful with panchakarma too... it's powerful, but timing matters a lot. If someone’s mind is agitated or body feels too depleted, rushing into detox is actually harmful. That kind of awareness comes from watching, not just reading. In my space, I try to keep things soft and unhurried. No one’s rushed in or rushed out. Patients should feel respected, not just treated. I’ve seen how emotional calm supports physical recovery more than any medicine alone. I guide with compassion and simplicity—explaining why, not just what. Even when I work on tough conditions, like anxiety-driven insomnia or long-term skin disorders—I focus on restoring balance without overwhelming the system. The goal isn’t quick fixes, it’s long-lasting, inner steadiness. Ayurveda gives us all the tools—we just need to use them thoughtfully, with heart. That’s how I practice, and that’s the kind of care I try to offer everyday.