Dr. Nidhi Pandya
Experience: | 9 years |
Education: | S.D.M.T.A.M.C AYURVEDIC MEDICAL COLLEGE,TERDAL |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly focused on ayurvedic medicine with a bit deeper interest in infertility—kinda became my core area without me really planning it at first. Over time I just saw too many couples struggling with conception, irregular cycles, or those vague hormonal patterns nobody else could really explain well. And honestly, Ayurveda got this unique layered approach, like not just the uterus or sperm count but whole body rhythm—agni, vata flow, mental load, all of it. I keep going back to classics when nothing clicks, esp for stubborn PCOS cases or low sperm motility ones where usual meds just stop working. I don't do anything flashy or big-claim kinda stuff, but I try to listen real close—some patients don’t even realize half their signs until we dig in gently. Not all infertility need strong meds—sometimes it’s about cleaning up ama, or lifting a deep seated stress loop. Bit trial n error too I’ll admit. I adjust herbs, dosages, and timings till something shift. Every patient teaches u something diff honestly. |
Achievements: | I am worked earlier as an AYUSH medical officer under govt setup which honestly gave me way more exposure than I thought at first. handling OPDs, emergency cross-referrals, basic counselling, community-level issues—u kinda learn to deal with whatever walks in. No filters. That phase pushed me to sharpen my clinical sense fast coz you don’t get time to second guess. It wasn’t all smooth but yea, it shaped a lot of how I approach patients now—more grounded, more aware, less textbook-ish. |
I am a qualified BAMS doctor, done with my bachelor's degree in Ayurvedic medicine n currently practicing as a ayurvedic practitioner. Right now, my main focus is kinda just staying grounded in real patient issues, day to day stuff—things like digestion problems, irregular cycles, skin flares, body pain, mental dullness, those weird vague complaints ppl often ignore but they pile up. I don't think there's a one-size-fit approach in Ayurveda, like even two ppl with same complaint respond totally diff to same med. That’s why I keep trying to adjust… herbs, diet, timing… even the way I explain it. Some days I feel I’m still learning the real depth of what I studied—the books were one thing but patients, they surprise you. And honestly ya I don't follow a rigid format, I mix a bit of classical with what’s working on ground level. Not all patients can do strict pathya rules or understand shlokas, so I break it down the way they’d get. I do try to stay close to basics, not run behind brands or trends too much. Mostly I use simple combinations, often make my own decoctions or churnas based on what they actually need rather than what’s ‘in stock’—bit messy, bit slow, but more real I feel. Anyway, I’m not saying I got it all figured out, but I do listen carefully, ask what others missed maybe, and stick with patients till we see some genuine shift—less pain, clearer energy, better routine. That’s what makes the whole thing worth. I don’t chase numbers, just wanna see someone walk in tired and leave a bit lighter.