Dr. Eesha
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Patanjali Ayurveda College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am someone who’s spent a lotta time working with Aamvata cases—it’s kinda my core zone in Ayurveda. Aamvata, as we learn, closely resembles rheumatoid arthritis, but honestly, it's more than just joint pain or stiffness. What I do is dig into the why—the root cause, mostly around accumulated Ama (toxic stuff) and an aggravated Vata dosha messing things up. That combo creates pain, swelling, fatigue—you name it.
When people come in with flare-ups or chronic stiffness, I don’t just toss them some churnas or tailas and call it a day. I look at their prakriti, which stage they're in, and how their body responds to even minor dietary or climate triggers. That matters a lot! I work on cleaning out the Ama first. Without that, no therapy really holds. Basti, Swedana, sometimes mild Virechana—whatever suits the person's strength and condition. And ya, diet correction too. Many don’t even realise that small daily things are aggravating their Vata or blocking Agni.
I also focus a lot on reducing dependency on painkillers. Not because I’m anti-modern medicine or anything—just that long-term use without addressing the root is risky, you know? I try to help patients build sustainable joint health—not just patch it up for a few weeks and wait for another flare. The idea’s to preserve mobility, reduce flare cycles, and get them feeling... just lighter overall.
If anything, I’d say each Aamvata case is like a little puzzle. But when you figure it out with the right combos of herbs, panchakarma, and even simple daily tweaks—it actually works. |
Achievements: | I am someone who didn’t just study Ayurveda, I kinda lived through it during my college days—was actually the batch topper when I graduated, which honestly still feels surreal some days. It wasn’t about chasing marks for me, I just really got into the granthas and case-based learning, and maybe that hunger to understand is what pulled me through.
Getting that first-rank thing wasn’t just a title—it gave me this weird mix of pride n pressure too, like now I had to actually live up to it. But also, it’s what built my base strong. All those nights buried in Charaka Samhita or trying to decode Nidana Sthana—they shaped how I now read a patient, not just a textbook.
The discipline I had back then? Still very much drives the way I plan treatments now. I don't cut corners, I double-check pathologies, try to listen deeper. That academic focus sort of became part of how I see clinical work—with structure, patience, and kinda... reverence too I guess. |
I am an Ayurvedic physcian who trained pretty hands-on at both District Hospital and Patanjali Ayurved Hospital, each for around six months. Honestly, those two internships kinda reshaped the way I look at real-life Ayurvedic care. I didn’t just sit back—I got involved in actual OPD and IPD work, taking patient histories, discussing treatment plans, doing diagnosis the Ayurvedic way, you knw, the real ground-level stuff. At the District Hospital, things were more intense than I expected. You see patients come in with fevers, digestion issues, menstrual troubles, breathing problems—all kinds. And you don’t get to just watch, you do the thinking part too—how to connect doshas to symptoms, how to tweak pathya-apathya in their daily habits. Working closely with the seniors there helped me see how Ayurveda isn’t just about herbs—it’s the whole lens through which we view health and imbalances. Then at Patanjali, I got to dive deeper into therapies, like actually do them, not just study. Stuff like Basti, Shirodhara, Abhyanga—they’re more nuanced than they seem in textbooks. You have to think about prakriti, vikriti, kala, even season—every little thing changes the line of treatment. And prepping the medicines ourselves? That was surprisingly grounding. Made me respect the formulations a lot more than I did before. All that said, these experiences really pushed me to focus more on root-cause healing, not symptom chasing. I feel way more confident now when counseling people—especially those dealing with chronic lifestyle stuff. I try and simplify things for them, but without losing the Ayurvedic depth. I just want people to feel like their care is personal and not, you know, cookie-cutter. Ayurveda’s not one-size-fits-all. And neither is my approach.