Dr. Neha Surushe
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Pravara Medical Trust's Ayurved Mahavidyalaya |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with gynecological problems, like periods going irregular, white discharge issues, PCOD, infertility n other hormonal kind of things that keep troubling women again n again. I try to see it all from Ayurvedic angle first—what’s the real root, is it vaat imbalance or agni not working right or some srotas getting blocked. Along with that, I also deal with general health conditions—like digestion, skin, fatigue, even chronic pains—bcz all of it’s kinda linked in the end.
I don’t jump to give a bunch of medicines straight away. I look at their lifestyle, ask a lot about sleep, food, daily habits n then try to match it with what Ayurved says. Most times ppl don’t even realise how small changes—like when u eat or what u mix together—can make a huge impact. And yeah, sometimes herbal support or Panchkarma is also needed, depends on the case. I feel confident guiding in these areas bcz I seen how slowly ppl start feeling better when treatment is done calmly n rightly. |
Achievements: | I am also making my own ayurvedic products now—which honestly was a big step for me. I started bcz I felt some patients needed formulas that were more specific to their needs, not just off-the-shelf things. Every product I worked on came from what I saw in daily practice—like common digestion issues, period pain, hair fall, skin dryness etc. Not made in bulk or for market hype, but more like real-use stuff. Seeing ppl use them and come back saying “this one helped” really felt different. |
I am currently working as a RMO in a multi-speciality hospital where I get to see all kinds of cases daily—emergency stuff, post-op care, chronic cases, sudden flares—honestly, it teaches a lot. It’s fast paced and sometimes unpredictable but kinda keeps me sharp n grounded too. But alongside that, I also started my own Ayurvedic consultation around a year back. That part’s more slow, detailed, patient-focused... I really get to sit with ppl, hear their full story, not just symptoms. In my private practice, I focus more on root-cause based treatment—whether it’s digestion issues, hormonal imbalances, fatigue, or pain that won’t go away. I use classical Ayurvedic approach but also keep in mind what modern reports are saying. I don’t treat lab values—I treat people. Sometimes a person’s issue is more lifestyle-based than disease. Other times it’s internal ama, or chronic dosha imbalance that needs actual panchkarma steps or deep rasayan support. Working in both settings kinda gives me balance. Hospital work teaches me urgency, clear protocols, fast action. My own clinic reminds me to slow down and observe the whole person, not just the part that hurts. I like being able to blend both these experiences—it helps me guide better. I don’t push pills or force herbs, I discuss options—what’s manageable, what’s needed now n what can wait. Honestly even one patient saying "hey, I feel better today than yesterday" makes this all feel worth it. That’s why I do what I do.