Ask Ayurveda

/
/
Dr. Govind Singh
FREE! Ask an Ayurvedic Doctor — 24/7
Connect with Ayurvedic doctors 24/7. Ask anything, get expert help today.

Dr. Govind Singh

Dr. Govind Singh
Jaipur
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Kala Aashram Ayurveda Medical College and Hospital
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am working mostly on ano rectal conditions like piles fissure & fistula – and trust me these cases can get tough if ignored too long. I usually go with kshara sutra or internal ayurveda meds, but only after looking into the whole pattern. Bowel habits, food type, stress level… they all matter more than ppl think. I also treat skin allergy issues – esp chronic itching, eczema-type flareups, weird rashes that shift places. In ayurveda we see it as pitta-kapha dushti, and I try to correct from inside first. Not just lepas. Each patient shows up diff, and no fixed protocol always works. You kinda have to sit with it, ask the right stuff, then decide the line of treatment. That part I’m still learning, and always will be probably.
Achievements:
I am a BAMS graduate n that’s where my actual ayurveda journey began. Studied core subjects like Roga Nidana, Kayachikitsa, Dravyaguna etc — not just for exams but to understand how healing really works. Practical postings helped a lot.. learnt how to read patient beyond just reports. BAMS gave me the base to see mind+body as one system, and I still use that foundation every day in opd.

I am someone who’s worked in an Ayurveda hospital for a bit and tbh that’s where I actually started learning what real patient care looks like. Not from books or theory — but like, the real way to listen. Sometimes ppl come in and what they say isn’t what they really mean. They describe pain but you gotta feel where it's coming from... body, digestion, stress, somewhere else. I learned how to take proper case history, not just symptoms but their daily habits, how they eat, sleep (or don’t), and how all that builds up into disease. At first I used to get confused if someone came with like 4–5 complaints together. Now I know how to slow it down, ask right things, track dosha imbalance n see what’s primary. Sometimes they don’t even tell you the main thing unless they trust you... Working around experienced vaidyas taught me to not rush. I still ask questions slowly, sometimes repeat them, or leave space for silence coz ppl often talk more when you don't jump in. Even simple things like giving medicines or explaining pathya – I try to make sure they actually understand what I’m saying, coz I saw how easy it is for patients to nod but not follow. That part matters a lot to me now. This experience kinda shifted my confidence too. I might not know everything yet, but I do know how to be present in a room with someone who needs help. And that’s where I feel I'm really growing.