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Dr. Sandip Jaivantrao Jadhav
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Dr. Sandip Jaivantrao Jadhav

Dr. Sandip Jaivantrao Jadhav
Own Clinic at Yavatmal , Maharashtra India
Doctor information
Experience:
10 years
Education:
Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Science
Academic degree:
Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda
Area of specialization:
I am mostly focused on treating Vandhyatva—infertility—in both men and women, using a very root-level Ayurvedic way that looks beyond just reports or test values. Every case feels different tbh. I try to understand not just reproductive hormones, but digestive fire, mental stressors, dhatu status, and even past traumas that might be affecting fertility. I use herbs, diet corrections, and when needed, Panchakarma—but only after evaluating if their body really needs detox or not. I also work a lot with metabolic and hormonal issues—PCOS, thyroid stuff, unexplained fatigue, insulin resistance... those patterns where the system feels kind of stuck or slow, and conventional meds might just suppress without healing. Joint and spine issues? Yup, arthritis, spondylosis, cervical pain, I use Agnikarma, Basti, herbal oils and internal meds that actually rebuild tissue strength—not just pain relief. I always go back to the root—like what's really causing the disease—and try to treat that, not just the label. It's all about balance, not just control.
Achievements:
I am really grateful to have done my CRAV training through the Ministry of AYUSH—it kinda shifted how I look at chronic & lifestyle issues completely. That phase helped me go deeper into actual Ayurvedic classics, not just what textbooks tell you during BAMS. Like, the way we analyzed prakriti, disease timelines, and chose formulations... it gave me a stronger grip on when not to overtreat too. It made me more confident in blending diagnosis with real classical protocols.

I am someone who still carries a deep imprint of my time as a CRAV physician at Arya Vaidya Pharmacy, Coimbatore—it was just one year, yeah, but what a year. I got to work directly under Padma Shri Dr. P. R. Krishnakumar ji, and honestly that changed a lot for me in how I saw clinical Ayurveda. It wasn’t just theory, it was living the granthas. We weren’t just discussing doshas—we were seeing them unfold in real-time across patients, case after case. I was involved in integrative discussions where senior Vaidyas would challenge you to think not just prescribe. We had chronic cases like autoimmune flareups, degenerative joint pain, weird metabolic clusters, stress-based gut issues—you name it. And rather than slotting patients into protocols, the emphasis was always on Rog-Rogi Pariksha, which made me slow down, look deeper. There were days where I’d be assisting on full-fledged Panchakarma routines—Vamana, Basti, Nasya—then sitting post-lunch for research interpretation or refining case notes. I didn’t just learn Rasayana therapies, I saw what they could do when timed right and tailored well. Things like how Dashamoola can work very differently depending on how you prep the gut first. That kinda stuff sticks. Documentation and follow-up were given as much value as the prescription slip, which honestly makes all the diference in long-term recovery. Counseling wasn't some optional add-on, it was a core skill—how do you convince someone to shift lifelong habits without sounding preachy? I learnt that here. That phase pushed me to trust the classics more, but also to be real about modern patient needs. Safety, sustainability, clarity—all these became part of how I practiced. Today, in my own clinic, I still draw from that training. Whether it’s designing a detox plan, adjusting meds for a thyroid patient, or counseling a stressed-out urban teen with gut issues—I go back to those roots often. Not to replicate—but to adapt, with sincerity.