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Dr. Diksha Anshul Khatri
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Dr. Diksha Anshul Khatri

Dr. Diksha Anshul Khatri
Sumanveda Advanced Ayurveda Clinic, Narela, Delhi -40
Doctor information
Experience:
8 years
Education:
Baba Mastnath University(BMU)
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am an Ayurvedic doctor and my clinical work mostly revolves around orthopedic pain issues, asthma-type breathing problems, and people struggling with things like insomnia or disturbed sleep cycles—those cases where the mind just won’t settle. I also treat both male and female infertility, and not with just herbs, but full protocols that blend shodhana if needed, food patterns, mental rest, and actual reproductive tissue support through Ayurvedic logic (not guesswork). A good chunk of my work involves mild mental health stuff too—like anxiety that lingers or stress that eats away at digestion and sleep. I use classical tools like medhya herbs, simple grounding routines, and satvavajaya chikitsa that people can actually stick to. Doesn’t need to be fancy to be effective. I’m also really drawn to Garbhasanskar. I guide expecting mothers with care plans that aren’t just about the baby—but the mother’s stability too. We talk about breath, posture, sleep, meals... It’s about holding her experience with respect. Same with postnatal care—helping her rebuild, slowly and cleanly. And when it comes to chronic pain—whether joint, nerve, or inflammation-based—I often use Agnikarma and Viddhakarma. They’re old techniques, yes, but when used right? give way more relief than ppl expect. My treatments focus on the long game. Realignment. Not just band-aid results. Everything is custom, practical, and deeply rooted in what Ayurveda actually teaches—not just trends.
Achievements:
I am a certified Garbhasanskar expert—trained at the National Institute of Ayurveda, Jaipur, which honestly gave me a solid base in understanding pregnancy care beyond just diet charts or herbal pills. It’s more layered. My focus during training was on the emotional, physical, and subtle shifts happening throughout pregnancy, and how Ayurveda meets all of that with calm, grounded logic. I was also heading operations at a NABH-accredited wellness center where I was managing day-to-day care protocols—making sure therapies stayed rooted in classical standards and were practical for modern routines. Whether it was Panchakarma planning, staff supervision or patient feedback loops, I was in the middle of all of it. That role really sharpened my sense of quality assurance—how to maintain consistency while still being personal with care. Together, both these experiences pushed me deeper into maternal wellness and integrative healthcare—not just as concepts, but in actual day-to-day practice.

I am an Ayurvedic practitioner with over 7 years of clinical work behind me—feels like longer honestly, because every single case adds another layer to how I understand this system. My focus is mostly on women’s health, chronic pain, and classical Panchakarma, though I see a bit of everything in practice. I always start with the basics—what the patient’s body is trying to say before we rush into therapies or herbs. One of the spaces I’m deeply involved in is Garbhasanskar. It’s not just about herbs for pregnancy or some diet tips—it’s about guiding expecting mothers through a phase that’s physical and emotional and spiritual, all at once. I work with tailored plans using Ahara (diet), meditation, dinacharya changes, and safe herbal combinations to support smoother pregnancy, natural delivery, and postnatal repair. It’s slow medicine. But powerful. I also specialize in Agnikarma and Viddha Karma—two para-surgical methods that I use mostly for musculoskeletal issues, neuralgia, cervical pain, and sometimes even for swelling that doesn’t budge with internal meds. These are precise, targeted treatments—not invasive but super effective when timed right. A lot of patients actually come when they’re tired of long-term meds or nothing’s really helping their pain. And yeah, Panchakarma is another core part of my work. I regularly carry out therapies like Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya, and Raktamokshan—with full attention to prakriti, season, agni state, and emotional readiness too. I don’t believe in blanket detox. Each case gets a different path—even the oil, the dravya, the timing—it's all selected very mindfully. I treat conditions like PCOD, infertility, hormonal acne, IBS-type issues, obesity, fatigue... often all connected in ways the patient hasn’t linked yet. That’s what Ayurveda does—it sees the pattern underneath. I also do awareness work, especially in rural settings, to make preventive care more reachable. At the end of the day, I’m just trying to make Ayurveda make sense for people again. Something they can trust, and keep using, even after they’ve left the clinic.