Dr. Chaitrali Rajendra Tambe
Experience: | |
Education: | Pravara Medical Trust's Ayurveda College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am into Ayurveda, not just as a system of medicine but kinda as a whole lifestyle thing too... like it's how I think, treat, and see health now. My main work revolve around treating chronic conditions through dosha balancing, diet tuning, and classic procedures like panchakarma or snehan–swedana stuff when needed. Sometimes ppl come in not knowing what exactly wrong with them—fatigue, gut problems, mood swings—and Ayurveda just gives this deep lens to understand all that. I do a lot of basic pulse/dosha checks (sometimes tricky), and then decide what kinda therapy can actually help.
I don’t only go by symptoms. I look at digestion, sleep, stress load, skin, even daily habits to catch what’s triggering imbalance. And yeah, I do believe healing needs time... like slow and proper. No fast pills. I use simple herbs, rasayanas, pathya-apathya guidance and focus more on making patient understand their body better!! Cause half the time, healing don’t happen just bcz they didn’t know what they were doing wrong.
Anyway, Ayurveda’s what I’m rooted in—feel kinda lucky to be part of this system. |
Achievements: | I am proud to say i completed my BAMS degree with an A grade from my university, which for me was not just a mark-sheet thing but kind of a proof that i was really into it... every subject, every rotation felt like it was building up my base in Ayurveda real solid. Honestly the academic part wasn’t always smooth, there were days I’d be exhausted or lost with so many herbs n theories. But I somehow managed to stay steady n focus through the whole five n half yrs!!! Still feels good. |
I am someone who really believes that Ayurveda isn’t just about giving herbs and oils—it's more like a whole way of looking at the body, the habits, the food, and how everything connects together. I got solid training in Ayurvedic clinical practice and feel most confident when I'm using therapies like Panchakarma or planning proper Shodhana for someone who's stuck in a cycle of chronic illness or stress-related issues. There’s just something powerful about seeing how classical cleansing can bring that shift in energy and clarity for ppl who've tried everything else. I work a lot on dosha assessment—sometimes it takes a bit of digging cause symptoms don’t always line up in a textbook way. But once I figure out what’s really going off-balance, I try to make treatment super personalized. It’s not just about giving a kashayam or lepa... I spend time explaining diet changes, routines, sleep timing, and even emotional triggers when needed. Many people don’t realise how big a role lifestyle play in their conditions. Right now, I’m mostly focused on lifestyle disorders and detox-based therapies. Things like PCOS, fatty liver, skin allergies, joint stiffness, IBS, anxiety-linked issues… those come up a lot. I try not to rush. I’d rather go slow n consistent, combining classical concepts with modern diagnostics if needed. Blood tests, reports, scans—they help me track things while still keeping the treatment Ayurvedic in core. I’m also pretty organized about documenting my cases—not just for reference but to understand patterns better. I guess every case teaches you something new, even after hundreds of patients. And I do keep learning, whether it’s updating protocols or trying to refine a virechana schedule that didn’t go as planned. In the end, for me it’s really about finding that balance for each person... not just patching the symptom. I think that’s where Ayurveda really shines.