Ask Ayurveda

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

Dr. Dhivya Bharathi A

Dr. Dhivya Bharathi A
Srishti Enterprises (Ayurveda| Siddha | Homeopathy)
Doctor information
Experience:
3 years
Education:
Sri Sairam Ayurveda Medical College And Research Center
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am focused mainly on respiratory stuff, nerve issues & endocrine disorders — kind of a weird mix maybe, but it all connects in Ayurved if you look close enough. I work a lot with patients who're dealing with asthma, wheezing, thyroid imbalance, diabetes, palsy, PCOS etc... lot of chronic cases where things don't really get fixed overnight. Asthma & wheezing — these really need careful attention, especially when weather flips out or ppl keep skipping diet rules. I usually go deep into breathing patterns, prakriti, even sleep rhythms to map it right. Diabetes and thyroid? Those are tricky. Hormonal things are slow but not impossible — I’ve seen change happen when food, lifestyle & herbs all sync properlly. Some cases take longer than others tho, have to be honest about that. Neuropathy & palsy are another layer — many times people come late, after trying all sorts of meds. We usually start slow, with mild snehana or nasya or nerve-nourishing rasayana stuff — I adjust based on how the body’s reacting. PCOS is different for everyone. Some come for weight, some for cycles, mood, skin... whatever it is, I try not to rush. Every case kinda teaches me more. Not every result is instant, but if patients stay with the process — like really follow it — things shift.
Achievements:
I am officially registered as a govt. recognized Ayurveda doctor, which honestly took a lot of effort & time (the paperwork alone... don’t ask 😅). I’m also a certified Yoga practitioner — not just asana-focused but more into breath, balance, subtle body stuff. These two go hand in hand for me — like if herbs fix one part, yoga fixes another. Took me a while to get both lined up in my practice, but now I kinda can’t seperate them. Both healing paths, just different doors.

I am a Ayurvedic doctor with 5 years of clinical practice, yeah including internship too — feels like forever and just yesterday at the same time lol. During this time, I’ve been seeing patients with a wide range of issues, from digestive troubles, skin problems, joint pains to stress-related stuff that doesn’t always have a straight answer in modern meds. Honestly, what’s kept me grounded is how Ayurveda looks at the *whole* person. Like not just the disease, but your lifestyle, your food habits, even how you think n sleep. I’m still learning everyday — and sometimes I feel like I’m just scratching the surface — but this approach really helps me connect with patients on a real level, not just symptom-wise. I work mostly with classical Ayurvedic formulations and Panchakarma therapies (those detox/cleansing routines... super powerful when done right, tho not for everyone tbh). I’m also used to managing chronic issues where people come in after trying 3 or 4 other treatments and still no relief. Sometimes it takes time — patience really is key in Ayurveda — but I’ve seen amazing shifts when the right treatment hits. There’s also that internship year, which was packed with hospital duty, case studies, actual diagnosis work — not just shadowing. You kinda get thrown in and have to figure it out. I learned to rely on nadi pariksha, prakriti analysis, and all the pulse-tongue-eyes diagnostics that still kinda amaze me when they line up with clinical results. One thing I try to do, is really listen. Like properly. Sometimes ppl just need to be heard and half the tension leaves right there. Treatment works better after that too. Not sure if that’s a skill or just human stuff — maybe both? Anyway, I’m here to help people heal using Ayurveda the way it was meant to — honest, personalized and rooted in nature. It's not always easy, but yeah it’s worth it.