
Doctor-Model Aditi Govitrikar Champions Women's Health
Former Mrs World and practicing psychologist Aditi Govitrikar is reshaping conversations around women's wellness, aging, and empowerment. The medical doctor turned model turned wellness advocate proves reinvention has no age limit.
A doctor who became a supermodel, then chose medicine again. Aditi Govitrikar's journey shows that you don't have to pick just one identity to make a difference.
The 2001 Mrs World winner spent two decades in the spotlight, walking runways and starring in films. But she never stopped being a doctor first, and now she's using both platforms to transform how Indian women think about aging, menopause, and their health.
"The glamour industry gave me visibility, but medicine gave me perspective," Govitrikar says. That perspective helped her see what many women still miss: aging isn't something to fear or fight.
As a practicing psychologist and wellness expert, she's tackling the misconceptions that hold women back. Too many women still view menopause as the end of youth instead of the beginning of an empowering phase. Too many wait until something goes wrong before seeking healthcare.
"Women often spend years caring for everyone else before themselves," she explains. Regular checkups, good nutrition, and stress management can dramatically improve quality of life, but only if women prioritize themselves.

Her message on beauty has evolved too. While social media has made the industry more democratic, filters and editing tools create unrealistic standards. "True beauty lies in confidence, self-acceptance, and authenticity," she says. The most attractive people are those completely comfortable in their own skin.
Govitrikar also speaks openly about surviving abuse from someone her family trusted. Her advice to parents is clear: listen to children's discomfort, teach boundaries early, and create spaces where kids feel safe speaking up. "Silence protects abusers. Conversations protect children."
Why This Inspires
Govitrikar proves that professional reinvention doesn't mean abandoning who you are. She walked away from acting at the height of her fame to become a full-time psychologist, bringing her medical training full circle. Her discipline in medicine shaped her approach to modeling, and her visibility in glamour now amplifies her message about wellness.
At a time when women over 40 are often sidelined, she's showing them they're just getting started. She's normalizing conversations about menopause, preventive care, and mental health in communities where these topics remain taboo.
The wellness advocate reminds women to stop accepting fatigue, poor sleep, and mood changes as things they simply must endure. Solutions exist, support is available, but women need to feel empowered to ask for help.
From pageant winner to psychology practice, Govitrikar's path wasn't linear, and that's exactly her point: women can be doctors and models, mothers and entrepreneurs, glamorous and grounded, all at once.
Based on reporting by Indian Express
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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