Our Team of Ayurvedic Experts — page 69
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Ayurvedic doctors
827
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Dr. Kiran Pralhad Bobade
263
0 reviews
I am working as an Ayurvedic practitioner since 4 years now, and just recently finished my MS in Obgy too. Honestly, it’s kinda rare to be able to look at women's health from both Ayurveda and modern medicine lenses—but that’s exactly where I feel most useful. Whether it’s PCOS, irregular periods, infertility, heavy bleeding, menopausal symptoms or pregnancy care—I try to connect the dots between hormonal balance, lifestyle, and deeper imbalances that ppl usually overlook.
Sometimes women come in confused... like they’ve tried meds, they’ve taken supplements, but things don’t really settle. That’s where I step in and mix both sciences in a way that’s not overwhelming. Like—when is the right time to use Ayurveda, when does someone need investigation or scan or even hormone support... and when it’s just about stress messing with cycles, we deal with that instead.
My approach is simple but layered. If a patient is in pain or discomfort, I don’t push them toward only one path—I explain options, risks, benefits... whether it's Ayurvedic herbs, Panchkarma therapies, or medical procedures if necessary. I believe the best treatment comes when we combine ancient knowledge with modern diagnostics.
I also work with antenatal care a lot—making sure pregnant women get the right nourishment n not just pills... supporting normal delivery wherever possible, and helping their body heal post-delivery too, which often gets ignored. Each woman’s story is different, and trust me, their body speaks its own language. My job is to listen—properly—and plan treatments that fit.
Whether it’s long-time hormonal issues or newly diagnosed ones, I’m here to help bridge both systems n guide women back to feeling steady, strong n in sync with their body again.
Dr. Neha Surushe
191
0 reviews
I am currently working as a RMO in a multi-speciality hospital where I get to see all kinds of cases daily—emergency stuff, post-op care, chronic cases, sudden flares—honestly, it teaches a lot. It’s fast paced and sometimes unpredictable but kinda keeps me sharp n grounded too. But alongside that, I also started my own Ayurvedic consultation around a year back. That part’s more slow, detailed, patient-focused... I really get to sit with ppl, hear their full story, not just symptoms.
In my private practice, I focus more on root-cause based treatment—whether it’s digestion issues, hormonal imbalances, fatigue, or pain that won’t go away. I use classical Ayurvedic approach but also keep in mind what modern reports are saying. I don’t treat lab values—I treat people. Sometimes a person’s issue is more lifestyle-based than disease. Other times it’s internal ama, or chronic dosha imbalance that needs actual panchkarma steps or deep rasayan support.
Working in both settings kinda gives me balance. Hospital work teaches me urgency, clear protocols, fast action. My own clinic reminds me to slow down and observe the whole person, not just the part that hurts. I like being able to blend both these experiences—it helps me guide better. I don’t push pills or force herbs, I discuss options—what’s manageable, what’s needed now n what can wait.
Honestly even one patient saying "hey, I feel better today than yesterday" makes this all feel worth it. That’s why I do what I do.
Dr. Mayuri Nilesh Irale
232
0 reviews
I am working in the field of Ayurveda since last 2 yrs, started out at a busy Ayurvedic clinic and Panchkarma Centre where I got real hands-on experience—seeing patients daily, understanding their complaints from root level, and most importantly, learning how to plan proper individualised chikitsa. From chronic digestion issues to skin probs, joint pain to stress imbalance—I got to assist in many cases n see how Panchkarma actually shifts the system when done right.
Now I’m handling my own OPD setup, and honestly that transition taught me a lot too. When you're responsible fully, you listen more carefully, observe closely and make sure what you're prescribing actually fits the patient. I don’t just give herbs randomly—first I try to understand their ahar-vihar, prakriti, symptom pattern... only then I go ahead with treatments. Some ppl need full Panchkarma line of treatment, others just need tweaks in routine or deep lifestyle correction.
Lot of my patients come with issues like acidity, IBS, hormonal ups-down, PCOD, fatigue, and many even say “everything looks normal in reports but I still don’t feel fine.” That’s the space where Ayurveda really helps—where modern tests can’t explain the full picture, but doshic understanding can.
I also work on prevention. I believe health is not just about removing disease but making sure body feels balanced n clear. I like to explain why I’m prescribing what I am—because patients need to be part of their own healing, not just follow orders blindly.
Still learning everyday, still refining my methods, but what stays same is the intention—to make ppl feel lighter, calmer and back to their natural rhythm.
Dr. Reshma C M
261
0 reviews
I am an Ayurveda graduate from VPSV Ayurveda College, Kottakkal—a place where you don’t just study Ayurved, you live it. During my rotatory internship, I got the kind of clinical exposure that really opens up your thinking. I spent months in different departments—taking cases, understanding diagnosis both from shastra view n clinical angle, doing OPD, handling IPD rounds... and yeah, sometimes just listening quietly to patients when they had too much on their mind.
Under guidance of seniors, I learned how to plan treatment—not just prescribing medicine, but seeing what kind of body-mind prakriti the person has, how strong their agni is, what the symptoms are really pointing toward. I was part of Panchakarma procedures too—not just reading about them but actually preparing the dravyas, assisting in basti, virechana, abhyanga etc. That hands-on stuff teaches you patience. Timing. Clarity.
Medicine preparation was another side I got into—helping in churnas, kashayams, oil prep n even measuring doses right for diff prakriti. We also had exposure to nadi pariksha, assessing ama, dhatu balance, and how diet n lifestyle tie into recovery. One thing I learned fast is, each patient walks in with symptoms—but the root? It’s rarely what they first say. You need to dig a bit deeper, ask better.
I’ve always tried to blend the classical principles with modern clinical sense—not getting stuck to either side too rigidly. Like if there’s a thyroid case, I’ll see the TSH levels, sure... but I’ll also ask about sleep, bowel habits, emotions, because that’s where real diagnosis begins. My training showed me how both science n intuition work together in this field.
Ayurveda isn’t just about treating—it’s about seeing. Feeling. Listening. That’s what I carry with me now in every consultation.
Dr. Samruddhi Vaidkar
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5
287
1 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who honestly belives that healing’s not just about fixing one problem n moving on… it’s more like a process, something you build into your life. I don’t just focus on the disease part, though that’s obviously important—my whole approach is to look at what’s causing it underneath, how your body's reacting, what habits are feeding it, all that. And then work with you to help your system get back to balance, not just short-term relief.
My consultations usually include not just Ayurvedic treatment but also specific diet plans based on your prakriti (body constitution) n dosha imbalances. I really pay attention to what kind of foods support your condition or maybe making it worse, and then try to gently shift those patterns—not one-size-fits-all kind of thing. Yoga’s part of the picture too. I’ll suggest asanas and breathwork that fit your condition n capacity, and yeah sometimes people underestimate how much impact a simple 10-minute routine can have. But it makes a huge diffrence over time.
Ayurveda’s not fast-food medicine. It’s personal. I try to keep it realistic though, like if your schedule is crazy or if you don’t even know what ghee is, we’ll figure a way that actually fits. That’s one thing I keep coming back to—each body is diff., each story too. Some patients come with skin issues, some with chronic acidity, others just tired of popping pills everyday for diabetes or BP and looking for something deeper or maybe just more natural. Whatever the case, I try my best to make them feel heard n supported.
And I’ll say this—I’m not here to throw sanskrit verses and go. I explain things properly, answer questions even if they sound silly, and keep you involved in your own healing. Ayurveda’s powerful but only when it meets you where you’re at, right now. If you’re looking for a kind of care that’s detailed, thoughtful and builds health slowly but surely—I’ll walk with you on that path.
Dr. Vishnu Prakash
295
0 reviews
I am an Ayurveda physician, working with patients who show up with all kinds of issues—like seriously, the range is wild. From joint pain to digestion stuff to chronic fatigue that doesn't make sense at first, I try to approach each case with a fresh mind and not assume too fast. My work’s not just about throwing herbs at symptoms but actually looking deeper—what dosha’s out of balance? Is the person sleeping right, eating at odd times, mentally stressed? These things build up in the body and the disease is just like the tip of that.
I treat using classical Ayurvedic methods—yep, everything from decoctions and churnas to lepas, oils and diet correction. Sometimes a simple lifestyle tweak plus a good formulation can actually shift the whole picture. I also work with people who already on allopathic meds, and we try to reduce overload, not just pile more treatments over it. My approach is about balancing—not only vata, pitta, kapha—but also the patient’s schedule, energy and practical stuff like—will they even follow this routine?
There’s no one-size-fits-all in Ayurveda. I believe in sitting down, listening properly and building a treatment that feels like it’s for them—not from a manual. I’m not claiming I cure “everything” (that’d be weird), but yes I do deal with a lot—from migraines, acidity, hormonal ups-downs to skin flareups or sleep that just... won’t come.
Sometimes people ask me, is this gonna take forever to work? Honestly, I don’t rush the healing process but I won’t drag it either. I track how you’re responding & we adapt things along the way. That’s the good thing about being in this field—flexibility + rooted in ancient systems that still make sense in this crazy-modern life.
Dr. Gayathri S
209
0 reviews
I am practicing Ayurveda since the last 3 years, and tbh those 3 years taught me stuff I don’t think books cud ever do. My focus’s mostly been on treating day-to-day health issues but over time started seeing more chronic ones too—like PCOD, joint stiffness, or digestion probs that just don’t go away easy. Sometimes people come with vague symptoms, and that’s where I kinda lean into my clinical gut along with the shastra basics, yk?
I usually prefer keeping treatment rooted in classics—medicated oils, customized herb combos, simple diet tweaks, all of that—but yeah, no two cases ever run exactly same. A lot of my work involves explaining to patients that real healing don’t happen overnight. It’s slow. But once they start seeing small shifts, they feel more committed. I also work on combining panchakarma when it's really needed… not just throwing it at every case.
I’ve had few challenging ones too, like a woman with thyroid thing plus major stress headaches—took months, but we found the rythm that clicked. I don’t claim I fix everything, no. But I do try to hold space for ppl who feel stuck. There’s something about knowing someone’s actually listening, that helps them more than we realise.
I do keep trying to learn, not just from senior Vaidyas but patients too—some patterns u only see when ur fully in it. And yeah I know 3 years isn't decades, but every year added some more layers to how I see disease, healing, even trust in treatment. Right now I'm just focused on deepening that understanding.
Dr. Deepali Goswami
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5
849
19 reviews
I am Dr. Deepali Goswami, BAMS graduate n working mainly around women's health. Right now m running my own clinic where i treat all kind of gyne problems—from irregular periods to PCOD, white discharge, fertility-related issues, menopausal symptoms n lot more that affects everyday life of females. I usually try to keep the language simple while dealing with patients cause honestly half of them come already confused or like really scared of what's happening inside their body... and if I use too much technical terms it just make it worse.
I’ve been practicing in this space for couple of years now—don’t remember the exact month, maybe two or three year back? but anyway, what matters is I’ve seen how many of these problems get ignored till they turn serious. That’s something I feel strongly about. My goal is to help women understand their symptoms early and explain how Ayurveda can help gently but properly, whether it’s hormonal stuff or pain or cycle issues.
I use classic Ayurvedic concepts like dosha analysis, ritucharya, n yoni vyapad chikitsa wherever it fits, but sometimes modern lifestyle really needs to be factored in too. Like if someone working night shift, no point telling them to wake up at 5am and do abhyanga daily—it won’t work. I’m practical about it.
Anyway, I try my best to create a space where women feel heard. Lot of them said nobody actually explained them what’s going on before. And that’s like the saddest part. I feel my biggest strength is really just listening n tailoring the treatment to her routine, diet n stress pattern. Some cases are harder of course... things don’t always go fast, esp when it’s been neglected for yrs. But then Ayurveda’s not magic. It takes a little time—but results feel real n lasting when done right.
Dr. Shivam Soni
302
0 reviews
I am someone who still think about my 12-month rotatory internship days now and then ‘cause that phase really shaped how I see things in practice. My internship was split across three places—each one very different, and in its own way, kinda overwhelming too.
At SAMCH Indore, I was mainly involved in Ayurved treatment protocols, and I remember sitting through back-to-back OPDs, learning how each dosha can actually show up in very diff ways in diff people. It wasn’t just textbook—real patients don’t behave like diagrams, you know?? Like this one guy had skin issues, but turned out the problem was rooted in his digestion. That sorta thing really make you look deeper.
Then at Govt. District Hospital Rewa, it was more general stuff—crowded wards, rushed rounds, real-life emergencies that don’t give time to think twice. We had to act fast, even with limited resorces. I used to feel nervous before entering the gynae ward but day-by-day, I started finding confidence. Got exposed to deliveries, minor procedures, and a lot of patient interaction—some good, some not so smooth either.
KN Hospital was a smaller setup, but I got to see a more balanced rhythm there. Less pressure than Rewa, but also more chances to sit with seniors and ask silly questions—without being judged!! And sometimes those silly questions actually gave me bigger learnings. It’s funny how much you remember from the quieter days too.
Dr. Shivali Sakariya
168
0 reviews
I am mostly working with people who want weight loss, but honestly it never just ends there. Most of the time, it's connected with hormonal stuff, gut problems, dosha imbalance, sleep issues—it's like one thread pulls out ten more. I try to not just focus on numbers on a weighing machine... Instead I go deeper with personalised diet plans, checking their prakriti, understanding their digestion and how lifestyle messing with it. Gut health is a big thing in my work, and I spend good time figuring out where exactly things start going off-track.
I use Ayurveda as my core, but I do mix things a bit—like with modern observations, lab reports, even psychological patterns. Panchkarma is a regular part in many treatment plans I do—vaman, virechan, basti, nasya and sometimes raktamokshan too if needed. I also do marma therapy, agnikarma and viddha karma for pain issues or blocked channels. One area I feel connected to is managing pcos, thyroid and lifestyle disorders like diabetes and obesity, especially in young people who are just too tired of trial-and-error medicines.
Leech therapy... ya, some patients get nervous hearing about it at first, but I explain slow and use it mainly for blood purification and skin stuff when nothing else works. Rasayana and rejuvenation therapies I suggest to anyone who feel drained all time or get sick too often. It’s a simple step-by-step thing, not some dramatic detox claim, you know?
Yoga and pranayam are like non-negotiables in my line of work—even if I give perfect herbs and diet, without calming the nervous system or restoring breath cycles, healing stays half-way. I also include kriya kalpa procedures like tarpan, aschyotana for people dealing with eye fatigue or digital strain. I sometimes also do cupping therapy and even use naturopathy basics, just depends on person in front of me.
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