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Dr. JSR Sirisha
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Dr. JSR Sirisha

Dr. JSR Sirisha
On Call Consultant in Multiple Ayurvedic Hospitals
Doctor information
Experience:
15 years
Education:
Dr. NTR University of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mainly into Ayurvedic management of women’s health stuff and ENT issues—kind of a strange combo for some, but for me it just.. works. I see a lot of patients dealing with period troubles, PCOS, fertility questions, even peri-menopausal shifts—things that don’t always have clear answers in other systems, or just get brushed off too easily. Ayurveda lets me dig deeper, and I use classical herbs, diet changes, and sometimes Panchakarma if needed to bring some real, long-term shift. On the ENT side, I deal with chronic sinus, ear blockages, allergic sneezing fits, hoarseness—mostly people who've tried all the usual sprays and pills and still not okay. For that I use stuff like Nasya (nasal therapy), dhoomapana, herbal decoctions or oils depending on the body-type. Sometimes I mix internal and external things to get better clearing—kinda case to case. What I aim for is not just "ok your symptoms are gone bye"—I try helping people see how their habits or stress or food patterns are tied into the whole mess. My role is more like, let's reset from the root... then we’ll talk prevention. It takes time but I think that’s the only way you avoid repeat issues later on.
Achievements:
I am someone who kinda grew up valuing clarity over noise, which probably explains why research clicked with me early on. At diff points in my journey, I got awarded for best paper n poster presentations at some clinical and academic events—wasn’t aiming for applause or anything, but yeah it felt good to be seen for the work that actualy matters. Mostly my focus was on evidence-based angles of Ayurveda, like clinical applications or even tiny observations that sparked better ways of thinking around treatments. These recognitions pushed me to keep blending classical wisdom with measurable outcomes. Feels like I’m still figuring stuff out though—this space keeps opening up.

I am a senior Ayurvedic physican, been in clinical work for 15+ years now, and honestly the path's been anything but straight. Started out with emergency room and cardiac care shifts in an allopathic hospital setup—that gave me this fast-paced grounding, you know, dealing with critical care under pressure. But Ayurveda, that deeper system of looking at illness—it kinda kept pulling me back in. Eventually I began integrating both streams, specially in areas like women’s health and gynec issues, where the overlap is really practical, not just theoretical. These days I work mostly with chronic cases. My main area of focus is Ayurvedic cancer support—Rasayana chikitsa, Panchakarma for detox, that sort of thing. I’ve worked quite a bit on blending classical Ayurvedic interventions with more modern protocols... esp. for people going through long-term chemo or post-op stages. The fatigue, tissue damage, digestion issues—they all need more than just one angle of care. I also treat ENT problems regularly—sinusitis, allergic rhinitis, voice strain—using therapies like Nasya, Dhoomapana, medicated steam and some local herbal formulations. It’s not just about giving a powder or tablet, it’s about how you deliver it and in what phase of the disease you’re at. What matters to me is getting into the root—not just the symptom. Every patient is different, you can’t copy-paste treatments. I rely a lot on understanding Prakriti, Vikriti, their lifestyle context, sometimes even emotional load, before planning therapy. Many times we go slow but steady—herbs, ahara-vihara adjustment, and tailored Panchakarma cycles when needed. Honestly, even after all these years, I’m still learning and updating myself. Whether it's newer diagnostic tools or re-reading sthanas from Charak Samhita, I try staying current—makes my practice more real n relevant. My idea is always: can I make the patient feel heard, safe, and genuinely better? If yes, I think I’m doing it right.