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Dr. Bhavesh Navalkishor Tapdiya
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Dr. Bhavesh Navalkishor Tapdiya

Dr. Bhavesh Navalkishor Tapdiya
Tapdiya Hospital, Panchayat Samiti Road, Risod, Dist. Washim
Doctor information
Experience:
Education:
Vidarbha Ayurved Mahavidyalaya
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am an Ayurvedic physican and my focus kinda leans heavy toward preventive and root-cause care. I mostly work with lifestyle disorders like PCOS, diabetes, obesity, thyroid or BP issues—where ppl are often juggling meds but still not feeling well. My approach is pretty straightforward: understand what’s really causing the imbalance, and then build from there using Ayurvedic meds, food guidance (Pathya–Apathya), and basic dinacharya tweaks they can actually follow. Digestive stuff is also a big part of what I do—whether it’s stubborn indigestion, IBS-type symptoms, or sluggish liver function. I usually work on restoring Agni and clearing Ama step by step. And with stress-related stuff, I mix Medhya Rasayana, lifestyle shifts, and sometimes just space for the person to reset their emotional rhythm using sattvavajaya chikitsa—it’s low-key, but works wonders when done consistently. I’m trained in classical Panchakarma—like Basti, Nasya, Abhyanga—and I don’t use it for everyone, but when it fits the case, it can totally reset how the body responds. I also support a lot of women’s health—from irregular cycles to fertility prep to postnatal care—and working in PHCs + rural settings taught me how to deliver affordable, real care without losing depth. Whatever I do, I always match it to the person—not just the disease label.
Achievements:
I am an Ayurvedic doctor and during my clinical training I handled over 1200+ patient consultations across OPD, IPD, Panchakarma, and even emergency setups. It wasn’t just textbook cases—some were intense, unpredictable, and really forced me to learn fast and adapt in the moment. I liked that part actually, where the theory met the chaos of real people. I also volunteered with Samta Foundation for rural and jail health camps—saw over 500 individuals who didn’t have easy access to any kind of medical care. That experience reminded me why community medicine actually matters, not just on paper. Listening, offering even simple advice, just showing up—it makes a difference. During the COVID crisis, I was part of the frontline triage team. I helped with patient isolation, screenings, and critical routing, often in full gear and running on very little sleep. But honestly, that time shaped a lot of how I now deal with pressure, compassion, and showing up even when things are uncertain. I was recognised for it, but more than that—it stayed with me.

Ayurvedic physician who's kinda grown through both sides of the system—working in quiet rural setups and fast-paced urban clinics. That contrast taught me a lot. You see one kind of patient walking 8 km to reach you with chronic pain and another just looking for seasonal detox and stress support. Ayurveda works for both, but how you use it needs to shift case by case. I’ve managed both OPD and IPD loads, sometimes juggling Panchakarma supervision, counseling a patient on diet, and handling a complicated skin flare-up all in the same day. I’ve worked a lot with chronic gut issues, asthma, eczema, menstrual irregularities, sleep problems—basically, the usual suspects when lifestyle's gone out of sync. But also handled acute emergencies in field settings, which meant relying hard on nadi, eyes, tone, even vibe. All that sharpens clinical instincts in a different way than textbooks do. One thing I always circle back to is personalized care. I don’t believe in generic wellness charts. Every case starts with their prakriti, their triggers, their routines—even their mindset. I use classical herbs, sometimes Rasayana therapy, sometimes deep detox like Virechana or Basti... but only when the body’s ready. No force-healing here. I’m big on patient education. Like actually taking time to explain why this herb is chosen or why I’m asking them to eat earlier at night. That clarity builds trust, and it sticks better. I like when patients feel in control of their healing—not just following instructions blindly. Also, I’ve worked with a bunch of community health programs, which honestly shifted my approach a bit. It reminded me that prevention is way more powerful than correction. Whether someone walks in with diabetes, chronic fatigue, hairfall, or they just wanna “feel normal” again—I work to build a plan that feels real, not perfect. For me, Ayurveda isn’t a product, it’s a rhythm. I just help ppl find theirs again. One step, one breath, one choice at a time.