Treatments

Ongoing care, with the whole picture in view

For people living with a long-term condition — an unhurried consultation that works alongside the doctors, prescriptions, tests, and monitoring already in place.

Dr. Yashasvi Verma · MD (Hom.) — B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra

Does ongoing care feel like this?

  • More than one doctor, one life

    You have separate appointments and advice, but you are the person carrying the whole picture between them.

  • A medicine list that keeps growing

    Names, doses, timings, refills — you want every doctor to see the same accurate list.

  • Repeating the same history again

    Every new appointment begins at the beginning, even though you have lived the story for years.

  • Reports spread across files and phones

    A test in one folder, a prescription on WhatsApp, a discharge note somewhere else.

  • Good days, difficult days, patterns over months

    A short appointment does not always leave room to explain how the whole month felt.

  • A family member helping to keep track

    A son, daughter, or spouse manages appointments, reports, or medicine reminders with you.

  • New questions between scheduled reviews

    Something changes and you are unsure which doctor to call or whether it can wait.

  • Wanting one unhurried conversation

    Not another disease list — a place to set out the medicines, reports, routines, and questions together.

How the consultation fits around your care

Start with the care you already have.

Bring your prescriptions, reports, and full medicine list. The first visit begins with understanding the doctors you see and the plan already in place.

Make space for the whole picture.

Sleep, appetite, energy, routines, stress, and how concerns overlap are recorded alongside your medical history — without replacing specialist diagnosis or monitoring.

One record that grows with every review.

Follow-ups build on the same notes, with new reports, medicine updates, and questions added instead of starting again.

Alongside your prescribing doctor.

Keep taking prescribed medicines exactly as directed. Any review or change to them stays with the clinician who prescribed them.

Dr. Yashasvi Verma wearing a dark suit

Your first visit, organised

  1. 1

    Bring current records

    Bring current prescriptions, medicine strips or clear label photos, recent reports and discharge notes, and the names of the doctors you see.

  2. 2

    Share the full timeline

    Dr. Verma records the existing care plan, what is monitored, what has changed, and the questions you want to discuss.

  3. 3

    Plan the next review

    Follow-ups add new reports, appointments, medicine updates, and questions to the same record while scheduled tests and specialist reviews continue.

Your doctor

Dr. Yashasvi Verma

MD (Hom.) — B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra

When you already live with an ongoing diagnosis, my first job is to understand the complete picture — the doctors you see, the medicines you take, the reports being followed, and what has changed day to day. My role here is alongside that care. I record the existing plan and keep the prescribing doctor responsible for every medicine decision.

More about Dr. Verma

Booking for a parent?

Bring the current prescriptions, medicine strips or label photos, recent reports, and the names of the doctors who manage each part of the care plan. You are welcome to help with the timeline and questions; the consultation keeps your parent at the centre.

Questions about ongoing care

Can I use homeopathy while I am already taking prescribed medicines?

Bring the complete list of prescriptions, over-the-counter products, and supplements to the first visit. Keep taking prescribed medicines exactly as directed. Any review or change to them belongs to the clinician who prescribed them, and every treating clinician should know the full list.

Will Dr. Verma change a medicine prescribed by my specialist?

No. Dr. Verma records your existing care plan so the homeopathic consultation sits alongside it. The prescribing clinician remains responsible for every decision about that prescription.

What should I bring to the first visit?

Bring current prescriptions, medicine strips or clear label photos, recent reports and discharge notes, and the names of the doctors you see. A short timeline of what changed and when is also helpful.

How are follow-up visits organised?

Each review starts from the same case record and adds new reports, medicine updates, appointments, and changes since the last visit. Dr. Verma confirms the review rhythm after the first consultation; there is no fixed outcome timeline.

Do my regular tests and specialist appointments continue?

Yes. Continue the tests, monitoring, physician visits, and specialist reviews already advised for you. Share new results with every clinician involved in your care.

What should I do if something changes suddenly?

Use your existing emergency plan. For sudden chest pain, severe breathlessness, sudden face or arm weakness, speech difficulty, a new or prolonged seizure, or collapse, call 112 or go to emergency care now.

Do you offer online consultations for people managing long-term conditions?

Yes. The clinic offers online consultations. Keep your reports, prescriptions and current medicine list ready, just as you would for an in-person visit.

What ages does the clinic see for long-term care consultations?

Patients aged 18 and over consult independently. Anyone under 18 is seen with a parent or guardian present; the parent or guardian gives the history and consents to the consultation.

Visit details

Clinic hours
Mon · Wed · Fri — 11 am – 2 pm
Tue · Thu · Sat — 11 am – 2 pm & 6 pm – 9 pm
Sun — Closed

Near Naraina Vihar Metro Station

Ready when you are

No preparation needed — just bring your story and any current prescriptions.

For sudden chest pain, severe breathlessness, sudden face or arm weakness, speech difficulty, a new or prolonged seizure, or collapse, call 112 or go to emergency care now — do not wait for a clinic appointment.