Dr. Arpita Satish Wader
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Maharashtra University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into Panchkarma—it’s not just a technique for me, it’s more like the backbone of how I approach chronic and lifestyle-based conditions. I’ve kinda focused my practice around cases like joint pain, PCOD, thyroid dysfunction, infertility, and yeah mental health issues too, which often get overlooked or misread. Kidney stone management also, with Ayurvedic shodhan methods—it’s one area I genuinely like working on ‘cause results speak loud there.
Not saying I fix everything in one go, but I really dig deep to plan the right detox or rasayan line depending on what that patient’s body actually needs. Sometimes people come in for one problem and we discover layers underneath it—it’s all connected, gut, hormones, stress. I just try to be careful and not rush it. There’s no one-size here, I like building the approach step-by-step. And yeah, not gonna lie, sometimes we try, things shift slow or not how we expect. But I keep adjusting, always.
It’s messy, but that’s real healing. |
Achievements: | I am someone who really enjoy speaking up and getting involved beyond clinic walls—won a few elocution prizes here and there, those were fun tbh. I also took part in quite a lot of health camps, like rural setups and awareness drives—got a bunch of certificates from them, not that I count them all, but yeah it shows I try to stay active outside OPD too. I guess I just like staying connected with people, whether thru words or work. Kinda keeps me grounded, you know. |
I am someone who’s kinda taken the long road through different corners of Ayurveda practice in Maharashtra—each place, each hospital, gave me something new to figure out. I’ve worked at Tarachand Ayurved Hospital in Pune, which honestly gave me some solid grounding, like hands-on stuff you can't just read in books. Then came Sassoon Hospital—AYUSH dept. there was different... faster pace, diff crowd, and yeah more challenges too. Spent time at Rural Hospital Jejuri near Pune, where things were a little rough but that’s where I got a feel for rural setups, you know, less tech more instinct. Then I was at Vishwaanil Ayurved Clinic in Vairag, Solapur—small place but packed with people who just trust Ayurveda. That kinda stayed with me. Lastly PIOS Hospital, Jaysinghpur in Kolhapur—more integrated work there, seeing how different systems meet but still keeping ayurvedic core intact. All these experiences kinda shaped how I treat now—sometimes I’ll go all classical with herbs n’ all, and other times, tweak it based on what’s real for that patient, that day. Nothing’s copy-paste. Every place taught me somthing different—some patience, some speed, some doubt also but yeah it helped me grow in ways I didn’t plan. Still learning. Always am.