Dr. Dikshita Joshi
Experience: | 5 years |
Education: | Dr. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Rajasthan Ayurved University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working in areas like women’s health, gut issues, skin flareups and those messed-up lifestyle kinda things that don’t always show on tests but you feel them everyday. I deal a lot with PCOS, irregular periods, stress-triggered acidity, IBS-y symptoms, eczema breakouts, even fatigue that just lingers for weeks. Honestly, half the time patients come in saying "nothing’s helped" and I get it—it’s frustrating. That’s why I don’t just go symptom-hunting. I focus on what's going wrong under the surface, like what’s the prakriti, where the imbalance really started.
My treatment approach is full-on personalized. I combine classical Ayurvedic medicines (like proper herb combos, not the generic ones), Panchakarma if it fits, sometimes just a solid reset in diet or timing or mental space. And yeah I do a lot of counselling, coz people need space to talk about their stress, their confusion around food or even body image—this all affects the health more than we think.
I just wanna make care that lasts, not something that works 2 weeks then fades off. |
Achievements: | I am still learning every single day, but till now I’ve worked with over 500 people dealing with lifestyle or stubborn chronic things—things like hormonal shifts, fatigue, gut mess, skin flare-ups. I’ve led full Panchakarma plans (some pretty intensive), plus designed herbal blends for patients when classical ones didn’t fit exact. I also run community wellness talks, joined a few integrative setups (those cross-system teams), and yeah.. I mentor juniors too—it keeps me sharp and grounded at the same time! |
I am practicing Ayurveda since around five years now—feels both long and short at the same time tbh. What started as a deep fascination with ancient healing turned into this day-to-day journey of seeing how powerful, precise, and calming Ayurvedic care can be when it's actually tailored to someone’s prakriti, vikriti, lifestyle n all that. My main focus is on chronic stuff—like menstrual disorders, PCOS, skin flares, gut issues, stress burnout, fatigue and the anxiety cycle that just don’t quit. I work a lot with women dealing with irregular periods, acne that keeps coming back, eczema patches that shift with stress or weather, and digestion that just never feels right. Those things sound small, but man, they can run someone’s life. That’s where I try to blend classical Ayurved principles with practical real-world fixes—diet tweaks, herbal meds, seasonal Panchakarma therapies if needed, and yeah, a daily routine that actually fits modern life, not the 6th century. One of my favorite things is seeing a person come back and tell me they're sleeping better now. Or their skin's finally clear. Or the periods showed up on time for once without pain. That slow transformation—it’s quiet but huge. I’m big on prevention too, coz once you wait too long, reversing things takes longer than it needs to. I also work with yoga teachers, dieticians, sometimes allopaths too—like if I think someone needs blood tests or imaging or if we just wanna rule things out. I'm still learning, always—reading Charaka when I can, or just reviewing old notes from a past case that makes me go wait, what did I miss there? Anyway, my whole point is to make Ayurveda doable, accessible, and not this mystical thing. I want my patients to understand what's going on in their body, and feel like they actually have tools—real ones—to heal and stay better. Nothing flashy. Just honest, slow medicine that works with you.