/
/
Dr. Hema sinha
FREE! Ask an Ayurvedic Doctor — 24/7
Connect with Ayurvedic doctors 24/7. Ask anything, get expert help today.

Dr. Hema sinha

Dr. Hema sinha
•PG Shalya Tantra (Surgery) resident at All India Institute of Ayurveda, New Delhi •Online consultant at Digvijayam Clinic, Sirsa.
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
Ayurvedic and Unani Tibbia College
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly working in surgery, but not the big theatre drama kind—more like focused care on ano-rectal diseases, urinary issues, wound healing, infertility, and lifestyle stuff that messes up people silently. Like, yeah I do deal with piles and fistulas a lot—both with classical Ayurvedic approach and sometimes mixed methods if needed. Fissure pain? Seen too much of that. Sometimes it’s not about giving meds but making people unlearn bad toilet habits, weird diets or ignoring small signs. In wound managment, especially chronic or post-operative wounds, I focus on things like Ropana therapies, local lepa and proper dressing protocols. You'd be surprised how fast wounds improve if you don’t rush the healing. I also see a lot of urinary problems—UTIs, retention issues, recurrent infections—some due to lifestyle, some related to hormonal stuff. Same with infertility cases, specially ones where couples come frustrated after 3-4 failed attempts elsewhere. It’s delicate. I try to keep the convo open but rooted in proper diagnosis—not assumptions. Lifestyle disorders is kinda vast right? But honestly, most complaints boil down to that—diabetes, stress gut, sleep gone, cycle disturbance, etc. I don’t throw big Sanskrit names at them, I break it down. That way people feel heard and also start taking action. I just try to keep it real. That’s all.
Achievements:
I am someone who don’t usually talk much about awards, but yeah—couple of recognitions kinda meant something to me. During my student days, I recieved the Student Merit Award by IMA AYUS (that’s Integrated Medical Association), which really pushed me to take studies seriously... like not just mugging stuff but actually understanding clinical relevance too. Then came the Yuva Pratibha Samman by Shri Indraprastha Vaidya Sabha, Delhi.

I am currently doing my PG residency at All India Institute of Ayurveda, New Delhi—and to be honest, every single day there kinda adds a layer to how I see patient care. The clinical exposure here is heavy, not just textbook-heavy but like, real-world complex. We get to handle chronic illness, emergency walk-ins, and also manage OPD flows which means... you don’t just study Ayurveda—you live it, if that makes sense. Before this, I did a one-year mandatory internship at AUTC & Hospital where I also rotated through Indra Gandhi Hospital, Dwarka and an AYUSH dispensary. That part was intense. Like, two months in the dispensary opened my eyes to primary care stuff that people usually miss in big hospital setups. Things like—how basic lifestyle correction can reduce drug dependancy or how some people only come when pain is unbearable.. and then expect instant fix. You gotta explain without making them feel judged. Also spent six months at Sanjay Gandhi Memorial Hospital in Mangolpuri where I was part of the rotation for handling GIT cases, OPD/ward followups, patient counseling (esp. with piles and fissure complaints), a few minor procedures too under supervision. The patient load there was crazy—fast decisions, limited resourses. Learned how to do more with less. I also do online consults with Digvijayam Clinic in Sirsa. It’s remote but feels personal. A lot of my digital patients reach out for chronic cases—lifestyle disorders, infertility-related concerns, ano rectal issues. I guide them using Ayurvedic protocols but make sure it stays practical enough for their daily routine. Being digital doesn’t mean being distant, you know? That mix of rural + urban, offline + online—somehow gave me a wider sense of how different people experience illness. And I guess that shaped how I treat now. I don’t just look for dosha imbalance, I listen for patterns in lifestyle, stress, digestion—all the micro stuff.