Dr. Heena kakwani
Experience: | 4 years |
Education: | Government Autonomous ayurveda college and hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am an Ayurvedic doctor with a BAMS degree who somehow landed deep into the world of skin n hair care... kinda naturally. After completing my base training, I went ahead and picked up certifications in cosmetology & trichology ‘cause honestly? I felt like external beauty problems were almost never just skin-deep. They usually had some inner imbalance nobody was really treating.
My work now kinda blends classical Ayurveda with modern tools—nothing fancy, just thoughtful. I see a lot of patients with acne, pigmentation, hair fall, dandruff, scalp itching, even early wrinkling or skin sag that doesn’t match their age... and ya, I don’t just throw some lepas and oils at it. I try to go into their dosha state, gut health, hormones—get the bigger picture before offering any solution.
Ayurvedic herbs, detox protocols, diet changes—they’re huge. But sometimes I’ll use newer techniques too if they fit the case. The point is, I don’t believe in “covering up” symptoms. Whether it’s dull skin or patchy hair loss, I see it as a signal from inside that somethin's off.
Honestly, what I want most is to help ppl feel more at home in their skin again—not just look better in mirror but feel balanced overall, like the healing is inside-out not the other way round. |
Achievements: | I am someone who really learned a lot during my time as a House Physician at our college hospital—it wasn’t just about medicine on paper anymore. That role sorta pulled me into real patient care fast, and I got to handle such a mix of cases that sometimes I’d second-guess, but that’s what sharpened my instincts. It gave me this hands-on grip over Ayurvedic diagnostics, like really seeing the prakriti & vikriti unfold in real ppl, not just in textbooks! It still guides how I treat today. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who kinda grew into this whole space by walking the traditional path first—like the real one. I spent around one and a half years at Shri Vishwadhyaas Ayurved Clinic learning directly under Dr. Anuj Jain, and that whole Guru-Shishya parampara thing? It wasn’t just symbolic for me. That time seriously grounded me—taught me how to think clinically and not just follow textbook lines. Right now I’m running my own practice—Shri Nirvaan Ayurved Clinic and Panchakarma Centre—and have been doing that solo for about 2.5 years now. Each patient I see, I don’t just hand over meds and hope it works out. I go deep into Nidan Pariksha and really try understanding what's goin on at root level before offering anything. Diagnosis needs to be precise, otherwise the whole thing starts wrong yk? My treatment involves custom Ayurvedic meds, proper Panchakarma (I don’t believe in shortcuts there), changes in ahar-vihar, and where needed, support for mental/emotional health too. Over time, I’ve seen a whole range of stuff—digestive mess ups, hormonal swing, chronic joint pain, weird skin things, PCOS, stress burnout—and each time I come back to samprapti vighatan as a starting point. Break the chain, and half the symptoms ease out naturally. What kinda keeps me goin is watching folks who’ve tried everything else finally feel seen here. Like really heard. And then watching their system slowly come back to center, not instantly but deeply. Ayurveda’s got that rhythm—it doesn’t force, it restores—and I keep trying to hold space for that. My approach’s still evolving tbh, I learn something new in nearly every case. But I’m clear about one thing—I want to keep this classical framework alive, without making it sound outdated or difficult. Just want people to experience what true Ayurvedic care actually looks n feels like.