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Dr. Madhvi Sharma
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Dr. Madhvi Sharma

Dr. Madhvi Sharma
Betterway Ayurveda, Gurgaon
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Shubhdeep Ayurved Medical College and Hospital
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly working with gut, lungs and bones—like anything from chronic acidity to bloating or respiratory flare-ups like breathless after mild walk or seasonal cold that just won’t go away. I like seeing patients who’ve kinda lost trust in usual stuff or are tierd of taking antacids or painkillers all the time. That’s where ayurveda helps in resetting things properly. Musculoskeletal issues—like stiff back, frozen shoulder or even mild disc bulge—I try to look beyond just pain & focus on root cause, most times it's all connectd to lifestyle or weak digestion. I’m pretty serious about diet correction too, it's like 50% of the work. If someone's digestion is poor, we start there no matter what the complaint is. I guide my patients on simple food changes, timings, and also their daily habits—like sleep cycles, bowel routines & even breathing patterns when needed. I won’t just give churnas or taila and send them off...I explain what’s hapenning inside & make them part of the healing, not just passive receivers of medicine. It's slow at times but it works better long-term.
Achievements:
I am always more focused on root cause than just symptms. Ayurveda helps to correct imbalances like vaat, pitta, kaaf — and that’s exactly how i approach treatment too. I usually first try to analysis what’s out of sync in patient’s body... whether it’s digestion, hormones, or lifestyle triggers. Then, with right advice on food, sleep n daily habits, I help them avoid repeat flareups. It’s not just cure—its prevention that matters, and that’s where i put most attention.

I am just about a year into my Ayurvedic journey, still feelin like I’m learning something new every single day. Even though it's early in my practice, that one year kinda feels like five — you know? Long days, full of patients, reading late night case studies, constantly checking if I missed something. My main focus right now is just staying super grounded in the classical principles, sticking to what the texts say while also figuring out how to apply it all in real life scenerios where things don't always look textbook-perfect. I’m drawn toward treating common chronic stuff — like digestive problems, periods that go haywire, headaches that won’t quit, even early stages of lifestyle disorders like stress-linked issues or mild hypertension. Doesn’t mean I’ve seen everything, but I do take time with each case. I ask a lot (maybe too many?) questions, take notes, compare patterns, and try not to jump too fast into herbal prescriptions unless I know the prakriti and the root cause kinda line up. I’ve also spent time observing panchakarma sessions closely — not leading them yet, but slowly getting more confident in suggesting the right therapies when needed. The way Ayurveda connects mental & physical health fascinates me honestly, and lately I’ve been reading more about manas rogas and how daily routine can mess up everything from skin to mood. Still growing, still figuring out what kind of doctor I wanna become. But I’m careful. I don’t like guess work. Every patient’s body tells you something — it’s just about learning how to listen better. That’s where I’m at right now. Trying to listen, observe, and get better one step at a time.