Dr. Fultariya Kruti Jayantilal
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | RK University Ayurvedic College And Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am done with my BAMS recently and yeah the 1-year internship really shaped a lotta things for me clinically. During that period, I was rotating through Kayachikitsa, Panchakarma and Shalya Tantra—each dept showed me diff ways how Ayurveda works practically. I got to sit with seniors, do case-notes, take vitals, even got some hands-on in basti preps & nasya routines which was super insightful tbh.
Most times I gravitated towards digestion-related complaints—like bloating, appetite swings, IBS type stuff—and lifestyle disorders too like sleep issues, mild anxiety or fatiguey kind of patterns. Those areas just made more sense to me, maybe ‘cause they’re so common now and Ayurveda actually handles them with clarity. I used to focus a lot on Nadi Pariksha (still learning, not claiming mastery!) and studying dosha-prakriti combo before giving any advise.
I’m really into Dinacharya, ritucharya, and diet mapping for different constitutions. My belief is even basic correction in ahara-vihara can shift chronic stuff if you stick to it. Right now, I’m trying to blend classical ayurveda theory with a little logic from day-to-day life — like not overloading patients with rules but still staying rooted in Shastra, if that makes sense? I wanna keep exploring this space with a lot more humility and curiosity. |
Achievements: | I am done with my BAMS and also took this really focused training in Garbhsanskar which kinda changed how I see prenatal care in Ayurveda. It wasn’t just theory—like yeah, we did learn about samskaras and month-wise guidelines—but we also went into daily rituals, diet changes and mantras that help the mother’s emotional state too. I now feel way more confident supporting pregnancy cases from a more holistic, grounded angle not just physical stuff. |
I am a fresh BAMS grad and just wrapped up my 12-month internship, which honestly taught me more than any textbook ever did lol. I worked closely with senior docs in different departments—Kayachikitsa, Shalya Tantra, Panchakarma—you name it. Each one gave me a different view on how Ayurveda handles disease from the root, not just symptoms. I didn’t officially join a clinic yet after internship, but yeah I did end up helping my own family a lot using what I learnt. Like proper diet routines, some classical yoga advice, simple but effective herbal formulations. I kinda realised during that time that knowing a person’s prakruti really changes how you approach their care. That individual blueprint affects everything—the digestion, sleep, even mental patterns. And Ayurveda really shines there, right? I’m drawn towards this whole integrative way where we can focus on both prevention and long-term healing, not just “fixing a problem”. What I really want going ahead is to keep deepening my clinical work. I want to be that doctor who’s thorough but also listens properly before making a plan. Safe treatments, personalized herbs, lifestyle tuning—all that grounded in shastra. Plus I’m super open to updating myself as I grow, not stuck in one path. Right now, I’m focused on building the kind of practice that stays true to Ayurveda’s roots but still fits into today’s health context. Precision meets empathy, that’s my vibe. Just hoping to keep learning and offer care that feels right—not rushed or robotic—but thoughtful and rooted.