Dr. Muskaan Mulimani
Experience: | |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into women's health and digestive issues—that combo kind of evolved on its own, didn’t plan it from start. But the more I saw patients coming with irregular cycles, PCOD stuff, infertility worries... and on the other side, chronic constipation, acid burps, IBS kinda patterns—it just clicked that digestion n hormones really run the show together, more than people realise. I use Ayurveda to find balance—sometimes with virechana, sometimes with plain ahar-vihar reset, depends.
I focus a lot on gut healing. Not just saying "eat light food" but like figuring what’s the actual agni status, how’s their daily rhythm going, is sleep poor or mind just overfull. I don’t rush to herbs unless the base is set... that’s where ppl skip and keep relapsing. And when it comes to wonem issues (yeah, I know I mispelled that)—it’s not just about yoni shodhana or lepas... it’s about listening without making them feel "problematic", you know?
Cycle pain, white discharge, late menses—half of it has digestion + stress hiding behind. I don’t say that out loud always but when patient starts noticing, that’s when treatment actually works long term. It’s a slow work, not flashy, but real. I keep learning, tweaking protocols, like sometimes you realise a patient doesn’t need a fancy medicine, just ghee with guduchi at right time.
Every week brings some new case that don’t fit in textbook, and that’s the part I lowkey love! Makes you humble too. |
Achievements: | I am someone who kinda found confidence through hands-on stuff more than just books—during my internship, I got to work real close in kayachikitsa n shalya tantra setups, like actual patient care, daily rounds, minor procedures too (nothing heroic but enough to get grounded). Those clinical hours gave me that first real sense of what healing looks like beyond classroom notes. Also, I post reguarly on Insta & a bit on fb—just to get Ayurveda in ppl’s feed in a way they can relate. Not preachy, just real. |
I am working as a medical officer at AGM Ayurveda College, Jamkhandi, and honestly the work is like a mix of routine + unexpected, every single day. You go in thinking you'll just be checking OPD cases and then someone walks in with this odd chronic issue no one could pin down properly before. And that's the part I kinda enjoy—digging into root cause, not just giving some painkiller and calling it a day. Being in a teaching hospital also means you’re part of a bigger loop—handling patients, yes, but also guiding interns, sitting in case discussions, sometimes reviewing panchakarma protocols that are running in the IPD. It’s not just about prescribing churnas or tablets—it’s like living Ayurveda in a daily, not-so-textbook way. And when students come up with weird doubts or alternate views, I’m like okay let’s think through it rather than just repeating classics word-to-word. That keeps the mind sharp too. Most of the crowd we see here is from semi-rural belt. And that has it’s own layer—people don’t always follow typical "pathya-apathya" advice, you gotta find what will actually work for their food habits, job timings, weather, even belief systems sometimes. Treating someone who does farming all day and skips lunch isn’t the same as advising an office worker with acidity. That taught me to adjust care plans without compromising on core principles. I do a lot of work around digestion issues and women’s complaints—especially menstrual disturbances and postnatal care. Also we get wounds, minor anorectal conditions, skin stuff… it’s never one kind of thing, which means you have to stay alert and not get lazy in diagnosis. And yeah, we do get follow-ups who say things like “last time your lepa worked better than my allopathy meds”—and that feels good, not gonna lie. Some days are tiring, like paper entry, student logs, or handling impatient relatives who just don’t wanna wait. But then you see one chronic patient smile and say "I slept well after 6 months," and that’s the thing that kinda balances all of it out.