Dr. Arshad Mohammad
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Kle Shri BmK Ayurveda Mahavidhalya |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working around sexual dysfunction, infertility problems and a lot with diabetes-related metabolic issues too—each of those things come with diff layers u knw, it’s not just about one medicine or a standard protocol. With sexual wellness and fertility, ppl usually come in late, like after trying a bunch of stuff or just waiting too long, and by then the case turns chronic or mixed with stress, low confidence, hormonal mess, even poor digestion. I try to approach it ayurvedically but also just humanely—like actually listen to what they're not saying directly.
In diabetes mellitus, I kinda focus not only on sugar levels but how metabolism break down in the long run—skin issues, urination changes, fatigue patterns etc. Managing metabolic disease needs full routine correction, not just herbs. I see how vata or kapha dominance shifts things like sugar spikes or digestion. Sometimes people think they're doing okay but gut or sleep problems keep flaring up. That’s where I dig deeper... adjust meds, food, timing, even emotional blocks, if needed. Not a fast-fix field, but very rewarding when it starts showing small, slow changes. |
Achievements: | I am Dr Arshad Mohammad n right now doing my post grad in Andrology & Infertility—kinda deep into male sexual & reproductive health these days, along with the ayurvedic angle on metabolic disorders. My focus stays rooted in classical Ayurveda but yeah, I do mix in modern clinical stuff where it feels right. Sexual wellness isn’t just about meds, it's also hormones, digestion, psychology—all of it tangled. I'm tryna untangle that, one patient at a time... little by little! |
I am working in the ayurvedic field since like 3 years now and honestly still feel like there's always more to learn, even after handling so many different kind of cases in both OPD and IPD settings. That mix of outdoor and indoor care changed the way I understand patients—like, not just quick consults but full-on long term treatments where u really gotta observe body patterns, reactions, progress... or even no progress, which is tricky. Sometimes even when the textbook says one thing, patients show something else entirely n you gotta adapt. I deal with a mix of things—digestive issues, skin problems, mild joint pain stuff, lifestyle triggers—and each case kinda adds a new layer to my approach. Working closely with both acute and chronic patients taught me how much small details matter, like even diet timing or mental state can flip how someone respond to a herb. It’s not about formulas—u gotta watch, tweak, rewatch. I do spend time explaining what the treatment plan actually means. Like not just “take this churnam 2 times daily” but *why* it fits their prakruti or condition. That makes ppl stick to it better, I feel. Also yeah, I’ve worked in setups where it was just me managing the flow—making clinical calls, followups, keeping records, sometimes even basic panchakarma guidance when support was limited. That kinda multitasking helped build real confidence, not the paper type but actual “you’re responsible here” type. And it shows me that patient trust comes not from using big words but from clear answers n slow steady improvements they can *feel.* Not everything works fast. But if u observe closely, listen well, and don’t rush—ayurveda does work.