Dr. Aslam Kalal
Experience: | 4 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on ortho-type cases—like bones, joints, back pain, knee stuff, frozen shoulder n all that. People usually come when they already tired of taking painkillers or doing random massage that don't really last. I like to go deep into root causes. In Ayurveda, we don't just look at “pain”—we see what’s going on with Vata, with dhatus, and how their daily routine messing up things like posture or digestion too (yep, digestion and joint pain are linked).
I use therapies like snehan, swedan, basti depending on the case. For many, just external oil won’t fix the deeper issue. If it’s spondylitis or sciatica, I sometimes include Marma Chikitsa or mild yoga if patient is open to that. And ya, I do explain things in a way that feels doable—no complicated charts or 20 medicines. My goal is to make body flexible again n reduce that swelling or cracking feeling which ppl often ignore for years!
Sometimes patients tell me “you were last hope doc”—and when they get up without limping, it feels good man. That’s why ortho work matters to me. |
Achievements: | I am not really someone who keeps count of certificates or awards—yeah, few came my way during college and some recognitions from hospitals too. But honestly, real achievement for me is when a patient walks in with chronic pain or stress n then walks out smiling. That shift, that trust they put—it means more than any trophy. Helping someone sleep better or feel normal again without side effects... that’s the kind of stuff I feel proudest of. |
I am Dr. Aslam Kalal and ya I’m from Delhi—just someone trying to keep up with real medicine while still holding on to the Ayurvedic roots I studied for. I did my BAMS from Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences, Bengaluru. That phase taught me a lot, not just theory but how Ayurveda actually works when you're on ground, seeing patients who don’t just want relief—they want balance, or peace or just sleep at night without meds. Right now I'm working at two hospitals here in Delhi, which keeps me busy but also helps me see a lot of variation—different kinds of patients, different expectations, and tbh, sometimes even contradictions in symptoms that modern medicine doesn't fully explain. Apart from that, I’m also running a clinic. Didn’t plan it to become something big but yeah, it’s going well... patients keep returning, and word spreads fast here. I’ve been in the field for over 2 years, and while that’s not decades or anything, I’ve spent that time diving deep into both Ayurveda and modern clinical practices. Like, I don’t just stick to one system blindly. I check vitals, do allopathy-based assessments when needed, but I always try to see things through the Ayurvedic lens too—like what's the dosha imbalance here, or which ahara-vihara combo might be the root. Whether it's skin issues, gut troubles, or weird unexplained fatigue that just won’t go—my goal is to listen properly first. I don’t rush. Sometimes just changing diet timing, or oiling the head at night works better than a pill. And then there are cases where you gotta do panchkarma or deeper detox. I won't lie, some days are a mess—too many files, too little time. But then you see someone walk in after 3 weeks and say “I'm sleeping again,” and that hits different. I mix modern diagnostics with Ayurvedic logic, and that combo—when used wisely—can make a big difference. Still figuring a lot of things out tbh, learning every single day, but I do it with full attention to safety, patient comfort, and what the texts actually say. I'm not perfect but I care, and I guess that’s where real medicine starts.