Dr. Neeti Gupta
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | FIMS, SGT University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am working mainly in gyane and skin, two areas where I see lot of people struggling quietly and sometimes for years. With gynecological cases like irregular cycles, pcod, infertility or menopause issues, I try to bring relief using ayurvedic approach that focus not only on physical side but also the emotional strain it carries. It’s not always a straight path, but giving honest guidance and long term care feels right to me. On the skin side, I deal with acne, eczema, pigmentation, hair fall, dandruff—conditions that affect both health and confidence. Ayurveda give me tools like herbs, diet changes, and detox therapies, while I also keep space for simple practical advice patients can really follow in daily life. For me both these specialities connect, since hormones, stress and lifestyle often overlap between them. My effort is to listen carefully, explain clear, and treat without rushing. Mistaks may happen, but sincerity stays. |
Achievements: | I am proud to share that my work got recognised when I won best paper presenta in an international conference. It was not just about the award but the chance to put ayurvedic perspective in front of wider medical community. Preparing that paper was tough, lot of late nights and rewrits, but it gave me confidence that research and practice can really go together. For me this achievemnt is reminder to keep studing and sharing always. |
I am working as an Ayurvedic doctor and over time I started shaping my practice around areas where I felt patients needed most help. Gynecological disorders are one part where I spend lot of my focus—things like PCOD, infertility, irregular cycles.. these conditions don’t just affect body but also disturb mind and daily living, and I try to bring balance with Ayurveda. I rely on both classical references and practical observation, always keeping treatments personal and not just fixed recipes. I also work with Marma therapy, which is a very special area of Ayurveda for me. Many patients come without clear diagnosis but with pain, weakness or blocked energy. In those cases marma chikitsa often helps more than medicine alone. It demands patience, right touch and understanding of the body’s inner points, and I like giving that time. Dermatology is another area where I try to help, whether it is skin allergies, acne or long standing eczema. Tri holo gy (sometimes people miswrite it as trichology but my work is more around ayurvedic skin-hair care) is also part of my interest—hair fall, dandruff, scalp conditions that frustrate people for years, they can often be managed well with herbal and lifestyle corrections. I also do Agnikarma, which some patients fear at first because of the word “agni” but once explained they understand it’s a safe and effective method when used properly. Especially for joint pain, warts or chronic muscular issues it can give quick relief. For me, specialization is not about one title but about combining different tools Ayurveda offers—herbal remedies, therapies, diet, counseling—into something that fits each patient. Sometimes results come faster, sometimes slower, but honesty to the pathy and trust with the patient is what I count more than numbers.