Dr. Rashmi C
Experience: | |
Education: | Sri Kalabyraveshwara Swamy Ayurvedic Medical College |
Academic degree: | Master of Surgery in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am an Ayurvedic doctor who mainly works with reproductive health stuff—kinda both male and female sides of infertility, PCOS, thyroid probs like hypothyroidsm, DUB, fibroids, those type of gynec issues. What I really focus on is understanding what’s messing with hormones & why the balance went off in the first place. Like not just treating a period delay or irregular ovulation but going deep into why it keeps happening again n again.
Lot of ppl come in already frustrated... like they tried a bunch of things before, and nothing really worked long term. I try to approach this whole thing with a mix of classical Ayurved plus real life practicality. Not everything needs harsh cleanses or high panchakarma protocols—sometimes it's just tuning up Agni and fixing wrong diet. I do work a lot with herbs, but equally on daily routine & emotional patterns. It’s all connected.
What makes the process different, I think, is that I really personalize. Each patient got their own prakriti, like their own code, you know? Whether it’s a woman struggling with irregular periods or a couple trying for years without success, I try to map out the dosha imbalance & then layer it with sth that fits them. Non-invasive, holistic, and usually gradual—but also deeply rooted in how real healing happens. Not fast fixes... but sustainable results, that's more my space. |
Achievements: | I am a gold medalist from RGUHS in MS Prasuti Tantra evam Stree Roga... which honestly feels like a huge deal still, but also just the start. Done 100+ infertility cases now—every single one taught me something diff. I’ve got like 4 papers published too, mostly related to reproductive care n treatments. My work spans across deliveries (both normal & c-section), plus Ayurved techniques like Uttara Basti, Kshara Karma etc. All this kinda comes back to one focus: better care for women’s health. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who kinda leans hard into both tradition and practicality, maybe bcz that's what actually works for ppl in real life. I look at health not just like symptoms-on-a-chart but like… the whole person—what they're eating, how they sleep, even stuff like stress or mood swings or those tiny things that pile up over time and mess with your gut or skin or hormones. I try to see all that. I’ve spendt the last several years learning how to blend classical Ayurvedic knowledge with what's actually going on today. Digestive disorders like IBS, hyperacidity, bloating—they’re super common now, right? And they almost always come with stress or sleep trouble or poor routine. That’s where Ahara and Vihara really matter. I use that as a base and then bring in detox plans (Shodhana), Rasayana where needed, sometimes just calming Shamana herbs too, depending what the body needs. My goal isn’t to just hand out some herbal mix n move on. I dig into Prakriti and Vikriti properly, and try to educate patients too—why their body is reacting that way, what lifestyle stuff made it worse, how to fix it without depending on meds forever. I like it when patients get involved in their care—it’s more sustainable that way. Even the Panchakarma therapies I recommend aren’t just for show—they’re chosen for exact reasons. Sometimes I also team up with modern docs when it makes sense. I don’t see Ayurveda and allopathy as enemies or something weird like that. We both want ppl to heal right? I read cases a lot, keep updating myself, even if it means rethinking my approach now n then. To me Ayurveda isn't just ancient—it’s alive, like it keeps changing with how people change. That’s kinda what keeps me going in this field... trying to make it more useful & honest and still rooted in it's real spirit.