Dr. Anurag Sunil Bhuskute
Experience: | |
Education: | Maharashtra University Of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working with mental health through Ayurveda, which for me is one of the most delicate but also most rewarding areas. I see patients with insomnia that just doesn’t let them rest, dementia where memory slowly slips, and epilepsy which shakes life in unpredictable ways. These cases remind me everyday that mind and body are never separate, and treating one without the other never really works.
My approach is a mix of what I learnt from ancient texts and what modern Ayurvedic psychiatry refines today. I use Medhya Rasayana herbs for clarity and balance, Panchakarma for deep cleansing, Sattvavajaya (our own form of psychotherapy) to re-train thoughts, and always diet + lifestyle corrections to ground the person. Some respond quickly, others take months, but consistency matters more than speed here.
I focus not only on reducing symptoms but on building resilience — mental clarity, emotional strength, ability to cope with life stressors. Every plan is individualized, cause one patient’s insomnia is not same as another’s. My aim is to help people find stability and long-term well-being, naturally. |
Achievements: | I am thankful I got selected for MUHS Summer Internship 2022 where I worked under the Biostatistics head — that gave me a clear picture of how data actually shapes clinical understanding, not just numbers on paper. Later in 2023 I was again selected for the IISc-INSA-NASI Summer Research fellowship, where I worked deeply on Rasayana, the Ayurvedic science of rejuvenation. That project helped me see how classical concepts connect with modern research, and why Rasayana still holds so much value today!! |
I am an Ayurvedic physician trained in BAMS, and my focus has always been on using Ayurveda not just for curing but for keeping people healthy long term. During my practice I realized most patients come with chronic or lifestyle issues — diabetes, stress, gut disorders, joint pain — and what they really need is someone to break it down simple for them. I use classical chikitsa, Panchakarma when needed, and daily pathya-apathya guidance to design plans that fit real life, not just textbooks. I’ve worked with people needing detox, diet corrections, or preventive routines, and each case teaches me something diff. Panchakarma especially gave me hands-on understanding — it’s not just about doing a therapy, it’s about preparing properly, monitoring every response, and guiding the aftercare too. Small mistakes there can change outcomes big time, and I learnt that the hard way at times. For me, Ayurveda isn’t about one-size-for-all treatment. I look at prakriti, agni, lifestyle habits, emotional state, and then decide what herbs, therapies, or routines suit them. Some just need diet tweaks, some need deeper shodhana. I also spend time with patients explaining “why” — cause if they understand the root, they stick to it better. Preventive care is another big part of my interest. Teaching ppl how seasonal regimens, food choices, and simple Ayurvedic routines can prevent half the diseases I see every day. It’s not glamorous work, but honestly, that’s where real healing starts. I see myself as both a clinician and an educator, trying to empower patients with knowledge, not just medicines. The goal is always sustainable wellness, not quick fixes.