Dr. Priya Gupta
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Govt. Ayurvedic college and Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with PCOS and pain cases these days and honestly both require a very diffrent kind of patience. PCOS isn’t just about hormones or late periods—there’s mood swings, digestion issues, hairfall, acne—like a whole mix. I try to get into the root through dosha imbalances and lifestyle mapping, and use herbs only where needed. Many times a few food changes n sleep correction does more than heavy meds tbh.
Pain management is something I slowly grew into—starting from small sprains to now handling things like chronic back pain, sciatica and joint stiffness. Each pain case tells it’s own story, especially when it's linked to digestion or stress which ppl dont usually connect. Panchakarma, Abhyanga, and light Vata balancing routines has helped a lot in bringing relief—though yes, it’s slow. But then again, healing should be.
I'm kinda particular about not rushing people into treatment. Like if I feel someone’s pushing their body too hard for fast results, I usually step back and rework their plan. Doesn’t make sense to treat symptoms if mind is still stuck in overthinking or fear.
My focus really is long-term healing—not quick bandaids. If someone’s ready to trust the process and tweak their day-to-day routine even just a little, I’m sure Ayurveda has answers. |
Achievements: | am someone who’s seen people come in exhausted—mentally, physiclly—and walk out weeks later feelin like themselves again. Healing patients isn’t just about giving medicine and sending them home, right? I’ve worked with folks having PCOS, migraine, neck pain, all that... and we worked through each thing together—diet tweaks, herbs, routine shifts. Honestly, nothing beats that moment when a patient says “I slept well for the first time in months” |
I am working at my own clinic for around 2 years now and honestly, it’s been quite a ride. Things started a bit slow—I mean, starting out on your own comes with its own share of chaos—but gradually I began seeing more and more cases, mostly related to PCOS, pain-related issues, digestion... and well, a bit of everything really. Each day kinda throws a new challenge but that's also what keeps it interesting. Most of the women who come to me are dealing with PCOS—like real stubborn cases too, where symptoms just won’t go away even after years. I’ve tried to focus more on long-term, root-cause Ayurvedic healing rather than quick fixes. Sometimes all someone really needs is a slight change in food, mindset n daily routine before we even touch the meds. I don’t jump into prescribing unless I see that nothing else is working, and even then, I prefer gentle formulations, not heavy combos unless it's super needed. Pain management’s another area where I’ve learnt a lot on the ground. Not just joint pain or arthritis, but also headaches, back pain due to lifestyle, and postural stuff. Panchakarma and simple marma-based therapy helps way more than ppl think—but yeah, patience is key which not everyone has lol. I mostly work alone, which gets hectic at times but I like having full control over how my patients are treated. Some days feel long, like really long, but I do enjoy that one message from someone saying “I finally got my period on time” or “My pain’s half now.” It’s those moments, y’know? That makes the work feel worth it. I’m also kinda experimenting with content now, nothing fancy—just trying to explain Ayurveda in simple language to make it less scary. There's sooo much value in the old texts, but ppl need it broken down into real life examples, not shloka-heavy lectures. This isn’t a perfect setup, and I still mess up or doubt things. But I’m in it for the right reasons. Just wanna heal people the way Ayurveda really intends to—by fixing their inner systems slowly, patiently, honestly.