
Specialist paediatrician with 7 years' experience in children's and newborn care
Experience
7 years
Languages
English, Hindi, Telugu, Urdu
Location
Abu Dhabi
Sees
children
Dr. Maneesha Kesireddy is a specialist paediatrician with seven years of experience managing children and newborn health. She completed her medical degree (MBBS) in 2011 and a Diploma in Child Health in 2015 from CAIMS in Karimnagar, India, where she achieved second rank in her final examination. Before joining Burjeel Abu Dhabi, she worked as a Medical Officer in the Department of Paediatrics at ESI Hospitals in Hyderabad, India.
Dr. Kesireddy has experience across general paediatric care and neonatal services. She holds certifications in advanced life support (ACLS), basic life support (BLS), and paediatric advanced life support (PALS), and is a member of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health.
She is committed to staying current with medical advances through journal clubs, case presentations, and seminars. She is a good fit for families seeking general paediatric care, routine child health check-ups, newborn assessment, and emergency paediatric situations.
Extracted from the doctor's hospital profile — patient-friendly terms
MBBS
CAIMS, Karimnagar, India · 2011
Diploma in Child Health
CAIMS, Karimnagar, India · 2015
Medical Officer, Department of Paediatrics
ESI Hospitals, Hyderabad, India
Consultations are available in English, Hindi, Telugu, Urdu.
Burjeel — burjeeldaysurgery, Abu Dhabi.
Yes — this doctor sees children.
Commonly treated: Acute Pediatric Illness, Asthma and Allergies in Children, Newborn Jaundice and Feeding Issues.
Profile compiled from Burjeel's public website (see original profile via the booking link). Data is informational, not medical advice.
burjeeldaysurgery
Abu Dhabi
No patient reviews yet — be the first.
Visited Dr. Maneesha Kesireddy? Your experience helps others choose with confidence.
Write the first reviewReviews are written by signed-in users who attest to a visit, screened before publication, and labeled “Patient-reported” until visit verification launches. They are opinions, not medical advice.