Lighting up hearts, not just diyas ✨ At Ved Sanjeevani Diwali is more than a festival — it’s a reminder of togetherness, gratitude, and shared joy. This year, we celebrated the spirit of light by sharing sweets, smiles, and heartfelt wishes across both our offices. Moments like these remind us that our real strength lies in our people — the ones who make every day brighter and every dream possible. 💛 Here’s to many more celebrations, milestones, and memories together. Happy Diwali from our entire family to yours! 🪔💫 Chirag Doshi Chirag Warty Anushree Ambatkar Vaishnavi Ajankar Siddhant Doshi Deepak Doshi Rekha Doshi Gunjan Doshi Yashika Gupta Yash Doshi Uzma sadaf Syed Sakshi Bijore Sakshi Dhawak Sakshi Chaudhari Sakshi Gupta Rutuja Gawai Krutika Raut kanchan Zade Shivani Atalkar Param Keshwani Nilima Nistane Chetna Salode Pooja Manohare Sneha Langade #VedSanjeevani #Diwali2025 #OfficeCelebration #FestivalOfLights #TeamSpirit #WorkCulture #TogetherWeGrow #HappyDiwali
Ved Sanjeevani
Retail Health and Personal Care Products
Nagpur, Maharashtra 21,113 followers
Proud manufacturers and retailers of herbal skin care products
About us
Ved Sanjeevani, where nature meets care. We are proud manufacturers and retailers of herbal hair oil and herbal nabhi oil, crafted with the finest natural ingredients to promote wellness and nourishment. Our products are rooted in the timeless wisdom of Ayurveda, blended with modern techniques to bring you effective and authentic herbal solutions for your health and beauty needs. Our mission is simple: to provide pure, effective, and chemical-free products that rejuvenate and revitalize naturally. We believe in holistic well-being, focusing on delivering the best of what nature has to offer. Our oils are carefully formulated to nourish, strengthen, and heal—helping you achieve healthy hair and balanced wellness in the most natural way possible. Join us on our journey towards natural wellness, and let us help you reconnect with the power of nature for a healthier, happier you.
- Website
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https://www.vedsanjeevani.com
External link for Ved Sanjeevani
- Industry
- Retail Health and Personal Care Products
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- Nagpur, Maharashtra
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 2024
Locations
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Primary
121 Khatol Bypass,
behind Om sweets, Wadi
Nagpur, Maharashtra 440023, IN
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3652 eastwood Place
Banner,
Pune, Maharashtra 411045, IN
Employees at Ved Sanjeevani
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Chirag Warty
Chief Strategy Officer | Ved Sanjeevani
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Siddhant Doshi
Chief Executive Officer | Ved Sanjeevani
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Dhanshree Gokhale
Export Coordinator ||Digital Marketing Freelance || International Export-Client Coordination
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Nilima Nistane
Digital Marketing Manager at Ved Sanjeevani | Founder @DMTII | Freelance
Updates
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Turns out, “doctor’s orders” can look like a walk in the woods. Our well-being is deeply connected to the world around us. According to the World Health Organization, time in nature can reduce stress, improve mood, sharpen cognitive function, and even lower the risk of chronic disease. Whether it’s a walk in the park, sitting by the water, or simply breathing fresh air, nature offers powerful benefits for our minds and bodies. Now, Sweden is taking this truth to heart with “The Swedish Prescription,” a new campaign backed by medical experts that literally lets doctors prescribe Sweden itself. Patients are encouraged to explore the country’s cultural and nature-based experiences, like forest walks, sauna therapy, and time outdoors, as a pathway to better health. Rest, joy, and connection with nature aren’t luxuries, they’re essential. #wellness #womenhealth #mentalhealth #healthcare
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When your digestive system breaks down food, your blood sugar level rises. The body’s cells absorb the sugar (glucose) in the bloodstream and use it for energy. The cells do this using a hormone called insulin. When your body doesn’t produce enough insulin and/or doesn’t efficiently use the insulin it produces, sugar levels rise in the bloodstream. When does type 2 diabetes occur? Type 2 diabetes occurs when the body develops “insulin resistance” and can’t efficiently use the insulin it makes or/and when the pancreas gradually loses its capacity to produce insulin. The body can gradually develop ‘insulin resistance’ this process is called pre-diabetes. In pre-diabetes (a precursor to diabetes) your body makes insulin but can’t use it efficiently. To reduce high blood sugar levels, the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas release more and more insulin to keep blood sugar levels normal. Over time, the cells fail to keep up with the body’s need for insulin and blood sugar levels start rising. What are the health effects related to type 2 diabetes? Nerve damage: High blood sugar levels can damage nerves, a condition called diabetic neuropathy. This can lead to numbness in the fingers, hands, toes and feet or tingling, burning or shooting pains that usually begins at the fingers or toes and spread upwards. Blood vessel damage: Nerves and blood vessels in body can sustain damage from prolonged high blood sugar. In the eyes, damage to the blood vessels can eventually lead to blindness. Minor cuts and blisters in your feet can lead to ulcers, and infections. In your brain it can help contribute to Alzheimers. Kidney damage: Kidneys filter blood, removing waste and extra fluid from your body. Over time, diabetes can damage your kidneys so they no longer work effectively, resulting in kidney failure. Kidney failure is not reversible and can only be treated by undergoing dialysis treatments numerous times per week. Osteoporosis: This applies to people with Type 1 diabetes. This condition makes your bones brittle. How to reduce it ?? During deep (slow-wave) sleep, the body repairs tissues, restores hormonal balance, and lowers levels of cortisol and adrenaline stress hormones that otherwise raise blood sugar. At the same time, insulin sensitivity improves, allowing glucose to move efficiently from the bloodstream into the cells for energy. Poor or fragmented sleep, on the other hand, triggers hormonal imbalance increasing ghrelin (hunger hormone), reducing leptin (satiety hormone), and elevating cortisol. This combination leads to higher appetite, sugar cravings, and insulin resistance key drivers of type 2 diabetes. In short, deep, restorative sleep acts as a natural metabolic regulator, improving glucose control, reducing inflammation, and protecting against the onset and progression of diabetes. #diabetes #healthcare #wellness #vedsanjeevani
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A New Beginning Rooted in Purpose. We are proud to announce the inauguration of Ved Sanjeevani’s new Corporate Office and Manufacturing Facility in Nagpur a milestone that is not just about infrastructure, but about impact, intention, and identity. Spread across 22,000 sq. ft., equipped with state-of-the-art automated machinery, this facility marks a bold step forward in bringing science-backed Ayurvedic healing to homes across India and the world. But what truly makes this place special isn’t just the machines, the walls, or the numbers. It’s the people who bring it to life More than 85% of our workforce are women, many of them from semi-urban and rural communities, now empowered with dignity, income, and purpose. From hand-labeling our first batch of oils in a living room… To now launching our own world-class manufacturing hub this journey is made of dreams, discipline, and deep belief in the power of Ayurveda. Every inch of this space stands on the shoulders of 🪔 A mother’s ancient wisdom 🪔 A family’s shared mission 🪔 And a team that works not just with hands, but with heart This isn’t just a facility It’s a factory of faith, A home for healing, And a temple where tradition meets tomorrow. Thank you to every team member, partner, investor, and customer who believed in us and in the vision of making Nabhi Ayurveda a global wellness movement. Here’s to building with soul. Here’s to growing with grace. Here’s to Ved Sanjeevani. 💛 #VedSanjeevani #NewBeginnings #AyurvedaForAll #ManufacturingWithHeart #WomenAtWork #MadeInIndia #HealingWithPurpose #NabhiTherapy Chirag Warty Chirag Doshi Siddhant Doshi Gunjan Doshi Rekha Doshi Deepak Doshi #WellnessReimagined
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Remembering Sir Ratan Tata: A Legacy Larger Than Life One Year Later, the Impact Still Echoes Across the World Today marks one year since the passing of Sir Ratan Tata an industrialist, a visionary, a philanthropist, and above all, a deeply human leader. Though he is no longer with us in person, his values, actions, and spirit continue to shape the world in ways few others ever could. A Man Who Led With Heart Sir Ratan Tata was never just the Chairman of the Tata Group. He was the soul of it. In boardrooms, he was known for sharp strategy and long-term thinking. But beyond the balance sheets, he was known for something far rarer compassion in capitalism. When other business leaders looked at quarterly earnings, he looked at generational impact. Whether it was pioneering the Tata Nano to give the common man a dignified four-wheeler, or backing Indian start-ups before it was fashionable to do so, Ratan Tata showed us that you could run a global business without losing your soul. The Legacy of Integrity In a world where ethics are often negotiable, Ratan Tata stood like a rock of integrity. He didn’t just talk about values he lived them. From walking away from unethical deals to standing by employees in crisis (remember the Taj Mumbai attacks?) his leadership was not built on PR, but on principle. Philanthropy That Touched Millions Ratan Tata never craved the spotlight. While the world chased unicorns, he quietly built hospitals, education funds, research institutes, and rural development programs often donating more than 60% of group profits back to society through the Tata Trusts. He wasn’t just India’s most beloved businessman. He was a global humanitarian one whose vision for India went far beyond GDP. Quiet Strength. Global Voice. In a world obsessed with noise, Sir Ratan Tata’s quiet strength stood out. He wasn’t on every stage or screen. But when he spoke whether on mental health, ethical entrepreneurship, or India’s youth the world listened. One Year On… The Values Still Guide Us Rest in peace, sir. You changed the world. #RatanTata #sirratantata #Tatagroup #Tata
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Not All Disabilities Are Visible Some people carry their battles silently. They show up to work, attend meetings, smile in conversations all while dealing with invisible disabilities like: 🔹 Chronic pain 🔹 Mental health conditions (like anxiety, depression, PTSD) 🔹 Neurological differences (like ADHD, autism, epilepsy) Just because you can’t see it, doesn’t mean it’s not real. These conditions can deeply affect a person’s daily life from energy levels and focus to emotional regulation and physical comfort. Imagine this: A high-performing team member frequently turns off their camera in meetings. Some assume they’re disengaged. But the truth? They’re experiencing a migrainous episode, triggered by light sensitivity due to a chronic neurological condition. They still showed up just differently. 💡 What can we do? → Create a culture of empathy, not assumption. → Ask, don’t judge. → Be mindful that strength sometimes looks quiet, not loud. At Ved Sanjeevani, we believe that true wellness at work and in life starts with awareness, compassion, and safe spaces. Let’s hold space for those whose pain isn’t visible, but very much valid. #InvisibleDisabilities #MentalHealthAwareness #ChronicIllness #EmpathyAtWork #Neurodiversity #VedSanjeevani #HealingGoesBeyondTheSurface #InclusionMatters #CompassionFirst
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Charak and Sushrut were the two great physicians of the ancient India. Ancient India had two forms of educational systems Shaleena and Yayavara. Acharya Sushrut who belonged to the Shaleena system had established Gurukul in Kashi and the students from all over would assembled and learnt from the guru. In Yayavara School, to which belonged Charak, the Guru would be a wandering monk who along with his disciples, would go from one place to another, and impart knowledge and serve the society. Thus Charaka Samhita is also the travelogue of Acharya Charak, who travelled across the country and documented the stories along with Ayurveda. Historical background- Charak belonged to 200 BCE Acharya Charak is revered as one of Ayurveda’s master physician, a foundational father of internal medicine. He systematized and expanded its medical knowledge for clinical use. Charak's work is organized into eight books (Sūtra, Nidāna, Vimāna, Śārīra, Indriya, Cikitsā, Kalpa, Siddhi) and is remarkable for its clinical reasoning: careful history-taking, differential diagnosis, understanding of doṣa (Vāta-Pitta-Kapha) imbalance, and stage-wise disease development. He emphasized the four pillars of therapy physician, drug, attendant, and patient and insisted that successful care depends on all four being competent and coordinated. A defining feature of Charak’s work is its ethics and professionalism. The text outlines a physician’s conduct compassion, truthfulness, restraint, confidentiality and reads like an oath, centuries before modern medical charters. He also wrote about public health: how air, water, place, and season affect populations, anticipating ideas about epidemics, sanitation, and environmental determinants of health. Charak placed major weight on diet and lifestyle as primary medicine āhāra (food), vihāra (daily/seasonal routines), sleep, and emotional balance before escalating to drugs and procedures. On pharmacology, he advocated proper sourcing, processing, dosing, and the synergy of multi-herb formulations, while warning against over-promising and under-observing. Methodologically, Charak prized direct observation and inference. He calls for repeating findings, tracking outcomes, and letting evidence correct doctrine an unusually proto-scientific stance for his time. His clinical chapters on fevers, gastrointestinal disorders, respiratory conditions, metabolic and psychological disturbances remain core to Ayurvedic education. His work influence has been sustained through classical commentaries and continues as a cornerstone of Ayurvedic curricula today. In the living tradition, Charak stands as the physician-philosopher who turned Ayurveda into a patient-centred, ethically grounded, and evidence-seeking medical system bridging timeless principles with bedside practice. #ayurveda
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Although you may not typically think of the skin as an organ, it is in fact made of tissues that work together as a single structure to perform unique and critical functions. The skin and its accessory structures make up the integumentary system, which provides the body with overall protection. The skin is made of multiple layers of cells and tissues, which are held to underlying structures by connective tissue. The deeper layer of skin is well vascularised (has numerous blood vessels). It also has numerous sensory, and autonomic and sympathetic nerve fibres ensuring communication to and from the brain. The skin is composed of two main layers: the epidermis, made of closely packed epithelial cells, and the dermis, made of dense, irregular connective tissue that houses blood vessels, hair follicles, sweat glands, and other structures. Beneath the dermis lies the hypodermis, which is composed mainly of loose connective and fatty tissues. #haircare #skincare #wellness #ayurveda #India
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How these values guide decisions (Chirag’s quick checklist) Is it healing? (purpose) What did customers say and did we act? (obsession) Where’s the data? (evidence) Is it fair to all parties? (integrity) Does it uplift our local ecosystem? (Bharat) What’s the smallest improvement we can ship today? (kaizen) Who is affected and how do we support them? (empathy) Purpose over vanity What it means: Heal first, hype later. Every choice must improve a customer’s life. How it shows up: We kill features/claims that don’t add outcomes; margins never trump safety. Decisions filter: Would we give this to our own family? If not, it doesn’t ship. Signals: Customer outcomes > follower counts; long-term retention over short-term spikes. Customer obsession What it means: Be uncomfortably close to the customer. How it shows up: Day-7 post-purchase calls, NPS + root-cause reviews, founder call-backs for tough cases. Loops: VOC → R&D/QA sprint → packaging/process tweaks → measure again. Non-negotiables: Clear refunds/returns, polite escalation handling, proactive delay updates. Evidence-first Ayurveda What it means: Blend classical texts with modern testing no overclaims. How it shows up: SOPs, batch records, stability studies; HPTLC/GC-MS via partner labs; pilot cohorts before scale. Standards: AYUSH compliance, documented contraindications, clear labels in simple language. Guardrail: If data contradicts belief, belief yields to data. Integrity & fairness What it means: Do the right thing when it costs. How it shows up: Same terms for investors in a round; make-good when we err; supplier payments honored. Culture: No fake reviews, no bait pricing, no fine-print traps. Investor ethos: Transparent cap table, clear reporting, realistic forecasts. Build in Bharat What it means: World-class from Nagpur; dignity of work for Tier-2 talent. How it shows up: 100+ women employed, skilling before hiring gatekeeping, multilingual SOPs (EN/HI/MR). Ecosystem: Local vendor development, apprenticeships with colleges, founder-led classroom days. Outcome: Community prosperity becomes a business moat. Kaizen mindset What it means: 1% better daily beats 100% better someday. How it shows up: Daily 10-minute huddles, “one fix a day” rule, blameless postmortems, A3 problem solving. Ops tools: 5S on the floor, visible defect boards, drop-test logs for packaging, weekly Gemba walks. Metric: Fewer defects, faster cycles, happier customers. Empathy-led leadership What it means: People > process; respect before results. How it shows up: Monthly 1:1s, open-door time with founders, hardship support, predictable shifts, growth plans for frontline teams. Rituals: “Wins & Lessons” circle every Friday; celebrate quiet contributors, not just targets. Payoff: Low attrition, high trust, teams that go the extra mile without being asked. Chirag Doshi Siddhant Doshi Gunjan Doshi Chirag Warty Deepak Doshi Rekha Doshi
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🌿 How Ved Sanjeevani’s Digestion & Detox Nabhi Oil Works in the Human Body The nabhi sits directly above the celiac plexus a dense network of nerves that serves as the communication hub between the brain, gut, and major abdominal organs. When Digestion & Detox Nabhi Oil is applied, gentle absorption through the rich capillary and lymphatic network around the umbilicus triggers both local and systemic effects. 🧠 1. Neurological Activation Gut–Brain Axis Regulation The abdominal skin near the navel is richly innervated with mechanoreceptors and autonomic nerve endings (primarily branches of the vagus nerve). When the oil containing Ajwain, Saunf, Pudina, and Castor Oil is massaged on the navel, it stimulates these receptors. This activation sends calming signals via the vagus nerve to the enteric nervous system, enhancing parasympathetic (“rest-and-digest”) tone. The result is improved gut motility, better secretion of digestive enzymes, and relief from bloating, gas, and acidity. 🦠 2. Gastrointestinal Stimulation & Detoxification The essential oils of Ajwain and Saunf contain active compounds like thymol, anethole, and fenchone, which are known to: Increase bile secretion and gastric enzyme activity Relieve intestinal spasms and colic Promote smooth peristalsis (gut movement) Pudina (Menthol) adds a cooling and carminative effect, reducing acidity and soothing the stomach lining. Meanwhile, Castor Oil acts as a mild detoxifying agent, stimulating the lymphatic and hepatic systems to eliminate accumulated metabolic waste. Together, this synergy aids gut detoxification and enhances nutrient absorption. 💧 3. Transdermal Absorption Pathway The skin around the navel is relatively thin and vascular, allowing lipophilic (oil-soluble) compounds to pass through the dermis and reach the superficial capillary network. From here, these molecules enter: Portal circulation, influencing liver and digestive metabolism Lymphatic channels, assisting in toxin drainage This is what gives the oil a systemic detoxifying effect, improving both digestion and energy levels over time. 🔄 4. Ayurvedic Correlation In Ayurveda, the navel is linked to the Manipura Chakra the center of “Agni” or digestive fire. Imbalance here leads to poor digestion, bloating, and toxin accumulation (Ama). The herbs used in this oil are known Deepana (digestive stimulants) and Pachana (detoxifiers) that restore Agni, cleanse the system, and bring the body back to equilibrium. 🩺 Summary of Effects Improves enzyme secretion & gut motility Reduces acidity, bloating & discomfort Enhances liver & lymphatic detoxification Supports nutrient absorption & energy balance #vedsanjeevani #ayurveda #healthandwellness
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