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Dr. Nancy Malani
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Dr. Nancy Malani

Dr. Nancy Malani
RK Malani Healthcare Nimach (M.P.) India
Doctor information
Experience:
Education:
Rani Dullaiya Smruti Ayurved P.G. Mahavidhyalaya Evum Chikitsalaya
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am an ayurveda doctor who honestly just want to make this old healing wisdom usable in today’s messy fast world. My main area is working with patients who carry long term chronic illness, the ones that don’t just go away with quick pills. Things like ulcerative colitis, psoriasis that keeps flaring up, migraine that disrupts daily life, PCOD with irregular cycles, diabetes control issues, IBS and similar disorders. Each case is unique, some overlap a lot, some don’t, and that’s where the holistic approach matters. I don’t look at disease as separate parts, more like patterns that connect diet, emotions, digestion, daily routine, sleep, even the way stress is handled. That’s why treatment isn’t one single herb or therapy — it can be a mix of panchkarma detox when body is too loaded, lifestyle reset, diet correction, and medicines prepared from classical texts. Sometimes even small change, like adjusting meal timing, makes bigger shift than giving 3 tablets. Of course it’s not always straight line, some patients expect result in few days, and explaining that ayurveda needs gradual correction takes patience. But when they stick with it, the improvement feels real. My work is less about fighting symptoms and more about restoring balance, step by step.. might sound simple but it needs attention to detail, and a lot of listening.
Achievements:
I am grateful that in my practice we could actually help some really tough cases.. like treating patients with gangrene where options were very limited, or guiding people suffering with ulcerative colitis who struggled for years. Also worked with migraine cases that were ruining daily life, and psoriasis that just kept coming back again n again. Not saying everything is perfect cure, but seeing real relief in these chronic condtions feels like a achievement worth sharing!!

I am still early in my journey as an Ayurveda doctor, just completed my one year of rotatory internship and now practicing since about 3 months. Honestly it feels both exciting and heavy sometimes, because you want to do your best but also realize how much more there is to learn. During internship I got exposure to different departments, inpatient and OPD, hands-on with case history taking, basic Panchakarma observation, and seeing how diagnosis by dosh imbalance actually plays out in real life and not just in books. Right now along with my clinical practice, I also work as an Ayurveda consultant (remote) with Caremeez. That role is interesting in its own way — you don’t have the direct physical presence with patient, but still you guide them through symptoms, food patterns, stress issues, minor illnesses, and help them adapt Ayurvedic lifestyle solutions. Sometimes the limitation of not being able to touch pulse or do physical exam makes it tricky, but you also learn how much can be understood just by listening carefully and asking the right questions. In practice I try to keep things simple, clear and practical. No unnecessary complication for the patient. Even if it’s diet advice, I avoid long lists and instead focus on what they can actually follow. For medicines too, I stick to what is relevant, safe and time tested. I know I’m at the beginning stage, still shaping my way of treatment, sometimes correcting myself, sometimes second guessing. But I see value in that too — it makes me cautious, makes me double check before prescribing. My goal is to slowly build a practice that is balanced, where Ayurveda is not just seen as herbal medicine but as a full approach involving diet, daily routine, stress balance, detox when needed. Even in these 3 months of practice, I already see small changes in patients when they follow consistently. That’s what keeps me moving, even on days when I feel unsure or stuck.