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Dr. Shayma Kabeer
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Dr. Shayma Kabeer

Dr. Shayma Kabeer
Ask Ayurveda Chikitsalayam
Doctor information
Experience:
Education:
Yenepoya Ayurveda Medical College & Hospital
Academic degree:
Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda
Area of specialization:
I am mostly treating lifestyle issues—like diabetes, thyroid, BP n weight gain stuff—those things that kinda creep in when the body’s daily balance goes off but ppl don’t notice till later. I also work with a lot of women facing PCOS, period troubles, fertility delays, or menopause shifts. These cases are never just about hormones on paper... diet, stress, sleep—they all layer up. Digestion too—I deal with IBS, constipation, acidity, sluggish liver—stuff ppl often ignore till it blows up. And skin+hair probs, yeah, like acne, eczema, hairfall... I try to trace the root, not just patch the flare-up. Mental stress shows up in weird ways too—fatigue, anxiety, late nights, no proper rest—it all builds up. I try to bring it all into a plan that fits each person, even if we’re only connecting online. Remote care can still feel personal if you read the signs right n keep checking in at the right moments. That’s kinda where my focus stays.
Achievements:
I am still figuring a lot, but yeah—got some certs that shaped my work. I did Therapeutic & Low Carb Nutrition on Udemy (2025), then explored Psychiatric Nutrition via Be Medic. Also picked Stress Mgmt from Lectera...helped me spot hidden stuff ppl don’t say out loud. WHO’s diabetic foot module n Arogyam’s course on diabetes added clinical depth. Did few awareness trainings at Yenepoya too—menstrual health, hearing loss, allergic rhinitis... all tiny angles that still matter in daily care.

I am Dr. Shayma Kabeer — mostly working with Ayurveda, women’s health, nutrition n postpartum care. I don’t really seperate these things out tbh, cause in real life they always overlap. Like, you can't treat hormonal issues without looking at digestion, or talk skin without figuring out the stress-eating that’s happening quietly on the side. That’s kinda how I approach care—connect the dots before jumping to herbs or meds. My focus is usually gynecology-related probs... PCOS, irregular periods, thyroid imbalances, all the hormonal chaos that shows up when diet, sleep, and mental load go sideways. I see a lot of young women stuck in cycles of fatigue, weight fluctuation, emotional dips—Ayurveda actually gives a slower but deeper toolkit to work with that. I do a lot of assessment through dosha lens, nadi, agni state, even simple daily habits. Infertility is another space I work in—again, not in a rush-to-conceive mode always, but more like preparing the system... checking if the cycle is syncing, digestion’s on track, sleep is stable. It’s the inner rhythm that matters more than just hormone reports. Same with postnatal care—I support new mothers with wound healing, lactation, nutrition, n mood swings, cause honestly, recovery doesn’t just mean uterus shrinking back. It’s about rebuilding vitality gently. I also specialize in Ayurvedic nutrition—like building food plans for gynec issues, postnatal nourishment, or weight stuff that’s tied with metabolic funk. It’s not about rigid diet charts.. I prefer daily doable changes, seasonal tweaks, emotional food awareness. I often include skin/hair health too, cause that's where ppl feel stuck or self conscious first. Ayurveda is flexible when you know how to listen. That’s what I keep learning. Every pt has her own rhythm, n I try to hear it right—even if she doesn’t have the words for it yet.