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Our Team of Ayurvedic Experts — page 90

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Ayurvedic doctors

909
Consultations:
Dr. Akshaj Rathore
36
0 reviews
I am working as an Ayurvedic Physician (BAMS) and most of my days kind of revolve around understanding how classical ayurvedic principles actually play out in real patients, not just in books. Sometimes I feel I look too deeply into small symptoms but it helps me catch things early, esp in acute or chronic diseases where the doshas shift fast and you need to track them carefully. I handle a wide range of conditions—lifestyle disorders like diabetes or obesity patterns, gynecological issues where women come with long-standing troubles that didn’t get proper attention, skin diseases that flare oddly with food or seasons, digestive disorders that go up and down with stress, joint pain that starts mild but bothers a person’s whole routine, and anorectal problems which people hesitate to talk about at first. I try to make them comfortable enough so they can share the details clearly, even when I am not sure if I am asking the question in the best way. Some days I feel my approach is little slow, other days I think taking time is actually the strength of ayurveda—doing proper nadi, agni, and lifestyle assesment rather than rushing. I like connecting everything back to the patient’s ahar-vihar, their small habits that they dont realise are affecting their health. I focus a lot on practical lifestyle correction, because when they actually follow it, the treatment response changes so much that it almost surprises me again and again. I use classical concepts for diagnosis and management, keeping each plan personalised instead of throwing the same remedy everywhere. Whether its chronic skin conditions or digestive imbalance or issues around menses, pcos-type patterns, or joint pain that needs long-term correction, I try to keep things simple but still precise. Maybe my method looks too straightforward sometimes, but it works for patients and that matters more to me than fancy words or heavy protocols. I keep learning with each case, and even on days when I feel unsure about a tiny detail, I remind myself that ayurveda gives enough tools to understand it if I just look a little carefully.
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Dr. Sakshi Anand Gawade
39
0 reviews
I am working as an Ayurvedacharya and sometimes I feel like I'm still learning new things everyday even after these 3+ years in practice. I try to keep my chikitsa as authentic as I can, going back to the classical texts again n again when some case feels a bit confusing or doshas not matching the usual pattern. I mostly meet patients with all kinds of ailments, small ones, long-standing ones, few that overlap in strange ways, and I sort of enjoy figuring out what the root cause is, even if it takes a few extra minutes or some rethinking later. I focus a lot on understanding how a person is living — their food, routine, sleep pattern (which is many time irregular), stress, all that. Sometimes the problem is not exactly in the symptom, but in the way the body is responding, and somewhere in my mind I'm checking which Ayurvedic principle fits better. My goal is mostly to make the treatment simple enough for the patient to follow but still proper chikitsa, whether it’s shaman or something needing deeper correction. There are days I end up explaining the same thing twice but I dont mind, I like when someone really wants to know why things happend in their body. I also worked with variety of conditions already — pain-related, digestion issues, skin, hormonal, even general seasonal things — and this exposure kind of shaped how I approach new cases. Sometimes I start with a basic outline and adjust it after seeing how the person responds, even small changes matter. I try not to rush into strong medicines unless needed; many times slow, steady dravya and routine changes do the better job. I believe Ayurvedic chikitsa has space for every patient if we listen carefully, and I genuinely try to support each person in a way that feels doable for them. There are days where the progress is slow or a bit uneven, and I do rethink if something needs a tweak, but seeing improvement — even mild — keeps me motivated. My aim is just to be helpful and bring relief wherever possible through the traditional principles that guide my work.
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Dr. Shweta
46
0 reviews
I am working across different setups in Ayurveda, and sometimes when I look back I feel like each place shaped one small part of how I treat today. I started at the Government Ayurveda Medical College, where I got hands-on exposure to the classical side of chikitsa, the kind we usually only read in texts but then suddenly you’re applying it on real patiants and noticing how small changes matter. I didn’t fully understand everything at first, honestly, but slowly my confidence grew in reading symptoms the Ayurvedic way. Then my work at "KCG Hospital, Malleswaram Bangalore" pushed me into a more structured clinical flow. There, the OPDs were fast, the cases were mixed, and I had to sharpen the way I decide things quickly, sometimes wishing I had few more minutes with each patient but still trying to give the best guidnce I could. That pace kind of trained my mind to hold multiple thoughts at once without losing the thread. Working at the "Epidemic Hospital" felt different and a bit intense… seeing conditions that spread fast, managing people who were scared or confused, it changed my approach toward community-level health. Ayurveda’s preventive concepts suddenly made more sense, not only as theory but like a living tool we can actually apply in crisis. Right now, my experience with the **NIMHANS Integrative Medicine Department** stays closest to me. It opened a new angle on how Ayurveda can work along with other systems, especially in cases that need gentler, long-term healing. I sometimes catch myself thinking deeper about mind-body links after a OPD day there, like trying to understand where exactly the imbalance started and how we can support the person without rushing or forcing things. These journeys togather gave me a wider, more grounded understanding of clinical ayurveda, and even though I still keep learning each day (some days more clumsily than I admit), I try to meet every patient with the same intention—to give authentic care, to listen properly, and to use the principles that actually help in their condition.
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Dr. Manish Godha
44
0 reviews
I am working in ayurveda from around 1.4 year now, and I feel like I am still learning new things everyday, sometimes in ways I dont even expect. I also have allopathic knowledge and a bit of icy knwledge that I try to use together when I am trying to understand a patient’s condition more clearly. I keep going back and forth in my mind sometimes, thinking how both systems can help me see the root cause better, and many times it do help me to handle cases in a more practical way. I am trying to build myself as a clinician who doesn’t stick only to one fixed idea but see the whole picture, even small symptoms that patients dont say properly. Sometimes it gets messy in my head to connect everything but eventually I find the right path through ayurvedic principles and it gives a kind of confidence. I focus on understanding dosha imbalance, lifestyle issues, and also how allopathic knowledge can support me in decision making when needed. My approach is simple—listen properly, think calmly (even if mind runs fast), and then decide treatment that is authentic and suitable. I try to stay honest with my patients, even when I am unsure about some complicated case, and then I study more to clear my doubt. I really enjoy exploring how different diseases behave in body, and how small corrections in food, daily habits, and medicines can make a big shift. I want to keep growing in this field because ayurveda has such deep potential, and every time a patient improves it gives me more clarity why I choosed this path. Maybe my way of thinking is not always perfect or polished, but I try my best to give safe and helpful chikitsa with whatever experience I have gathered till now.
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Dr. Nayan Wale
123
0 reviews
I am working in medical field for total 7 years, out of which around 4 years was in hospital setup and 3 years in clinic practice. Hospital work gave me strong base, long duty hours, different type of cases, emergencies sometimes, and learning under pressure. Clinic work is different, slower but deeper, where I sit with patients, listen more, explain things again n again, and follow them over time. In hospital I handled day to day OPD cases, routine management, and also assisted seniors when things got complicated. That phase shaped my clinical thinking a lot, even now I sometimes catch myself thinking like hospital mode when a case looks serious. Clinic practice on the other hand taught me patience. Patients come with chronic issues, expectations, doubts, sometimes fear, and I had to adjust my approach accordingly. I focus on practical treatment planning, not just diagnosis on paper. Some days I feel I should have more time with each patient, but I try to balance it. My experience across hospital and clinic helps me understand both acute care and long term disease management. I still keep learning everyday, reading, observing patterns, correcting myself when needed, because medicine never stays same for long, and neither should the doctor.
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Dr. Ramesh Bhatiya
15
0 reviews
I am having about a year of hands-on experience in clinical health, mostly working closely with patients in real care settings. My focus stay on understanding disease beyond reports, looking at daily habits, mental state, and overall strength of body. I follow a holistic approach especially while supporting cancer patients, where care is not only about symptoms but also comfort, nutrition, and emotional balance. During this time I worked with patients at different stages of illness, and that taught me patience, sometimes things move slow, sometimes progress feel uneven. I try to integrate holistic health principles carefully, without overdoing anything, because every patient respond differntly. Cancer care, in my view, need gentle planning and steady follow-up, not aggressive promises. I believe clinical experience shape judgement more than theory alone, though I still keep learning everyday. My approach remain patient-centric, focused on improving quality of life and supporting overall wellbeing. There are days when outcomes are uncertain, but consistent care and honest guidance still matter a lot, even when answers are not very clear.
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Dr. Sailee Bhausaheb Deshmukh
19
0 reviews
I am working in ayurved practice with around 3 years of experience, mostly focused on Striroga and women’s health care. My daily work include managing common gynecological conditions through ayurvedic principles, lifestyle guidance, and traditional treatment plans. I spend lot of time listening, sometimes longer than planned, because many issues are layered and not always clear at first glance. I am especially involved in Striroga cases like menstrual irregularites, hormonal imbalance, and general reproductive health, using classical ayurvedic approach. Practice taught me patience, and also that every body react little different, which can be frustrating but also interesting. I try to balance clinical knowledge with practical care, even when answers take time to show. I am still learning every day through hands-on practice, cases that dont follow textbook pattern, and small improvements I see in patients. My approach stay simple, focused on long-term health rather than quick fixes, though sometimes I question if pace is slow. Overall my work reflect steady commitment to ayurved and women centered care!!
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Dr. Rehana
24
0 reviews
I am an Ayurveda doctor, focused on understanding health through the classical principles of Ayurvedic medicine and how they apply in everyday life today. My work mainly revolves around using traditional Ayurvedic concepts like dosha balance, digestion, lifestyle correction, and preventive care, and honestly I am still learning new things daily as practice itself teaches a lot. I am trained in identifying root causes of common health concerns rather than only looking at symptoms, and I try to approach each case with patience and clear observation. Ayurveda is not fast medicine, and I sometimes remind patients about this, because the body needs time to respond when treatment is natural and individualized. I work with basic Ayurvedic treatment planning, diet guidance, and routine correction, which feels simple but often gets ignored. My interest lies in holistic care, where food, sleep, stress, and daily habits are just as important as medicines. I believe small changes can make real difference, even though it does not sound dramatic. At times I double check my own understanding, because accuracy matter a lot in medical practice, even traditional systems. I try to keep consultations practical and honest, without overcomplicating things or promising unrealistic results!! Clear communication is important for me, especially when explaining Ayurvedic concepts to people who are new to it. I also focus on preventive healthcare, because avoiding disease is always better than managing it later. I am committed to practicing Ayurveda with responsibility, safety, and respect for classical texts, while staying aware of modern health needs. The goal is steady improvement, not perfection, and I am still growing into this role as a doctor, one patient at time.
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Dr. Navyashree
24
0 reviews
I am working in areas of psychiatry, general medicine, and lifestyle with diet planning, and I usually see how closely all these parts are connected, even when patients come with only one main complaint. Mental health concerns, stress patterns, sleep issues, and emotional imbalance often show physical symptoms, and I try to pay attention to that link during consultation. I am involved in basic psychiatric consultation where listening carefully matters as much as medical knowledge. Sometimes symptoms are clear, sometimes they are not, and that can be challenging, but it also pushes me to slow down and look deeper. I approach these cases with patience, because mental health care need time and trust, not quick answers. Along with this, I handle general medicine concerns, focusing on common illnesses, long term health maintenance, and early identification of imbalance. I do not separate mind and body strictly, even though systems are taught that way. Both affect each other, whether we like it or not. Lifestyle and diet planning is a big part of my work. I guide patients on daily routines, food habits, and practical changes that can support both physical and mental health. These plans are kept realistic, not perfect, because people have real lives!!. I keep refining my approach, learning from mistakes, feedback, and daily practice, since medicine never stay fixed and neither do people.
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Dr. Amrita
21
0 reviews
I am Dr. Amrita, a BAMS-qualified Ayurveda physician, and my work mostly centers around women’s health and pain management, including hands-on therapies like Kalari Marma treatment. I practice Ayurveda in a way that feels grounded and practical, focusing on why a condition started in the first place, not only how it shows up today. My clinical approach is rooted in detailed assessment, understanding body constitution, and observing patterns that often get missed in rushed care. Women’s health issues, chronic pain, and musculoskeletal discomfort can be layered and slow to resolve, and I see that regularly. I try to stay patient with that process, even when progress feels uneven or confusing at times. I rely on individualized Ayurvedic treatment plans, supported strongly by diet correction and lifestyle modification. Food, daily routine, and mental load play bigger role than most people expect, and explaining this clearly is part of my responsibility. I spend time on patient education, because understanding the treatment makes following it easier, even when changes feel inconvenient. I am committed to evidence-based Ayurvedic practice and safe decision making, without exaggerating outcomes or rushing results!!. Long term health matters more to me than short relief. I keep learning through practice, reflection, and outcomes, adjusting my approach when needed, because medicine never stay fixed and neither do people.
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Latest reviews

Vada
12 hours ago
Thanks a ton! I've been dealing with this for ages, and your advice is super clear and detailed. Finally feel like I have a plan to follow. Feels good to know what steps to take next!
Thanks a ton! I've been dealing with this for ages, and your advice is super clear and detailed. Finally feel like I have a plan to follow. Feels good to know what steps to take next!

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