
MBBS, DA
General practitioner with 8 years in emergency and intensive care
Experience
8 years
Languages
English, Hindi, Marathi
Location
Musaffah, Abu Dhabi
Sees
adults
Dr. Gayatri D. Khairnar is a general practitioner with over eight years of experience in emergency and intensive care settings. She trained at RCSM Government Medical College in Maharashtra, India, where she completed her Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS), and went on to earn her Diploma in Anesthesia (DA) from Lokmanya Tilak Government Medical College in Mumbai. She has also passed the primary MRCEM examination of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine in the UK.
Her clinical expertise spans critical care, emergency medicine, and intensive care management. She is skilled in stabilizing and treating patients in high-pressure acute settings, as well as managing patients in routine outpatient clinics. Her combination of emergency medicine training and anesthesia qualifications enables her to handle complex acute conditions and support patients through critical periods.
Special interests: anesthesia, emergency and intensive care management.
Extracted from the doctor's hospital profile — patient-friendly terms
Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS)
RCSM Government Medical College, India
Diploma in Anesthesia (DA)
Lokmanya Tilak Government Medical College, India
General Practitioner
LLH Hospital, United Arab Emirates
Consultations are available in English, Hindi, Marathi.
LLH Hospital — Musaffah, Musaffah, Abu Dhabi.
This doctor primarily sees adults.
Commonly treated: Acute Medical Emergencies, Critical Illness.
Profile compiled from LLH Hospital's public website (see original profile via the booking link). Data is informational, not medical advice.
LLH Hospital Musaffah: 4.7★ · 7,588 Google reviews — Google rating for the clinic, not this doctor.
No patient reviews yet — be the first.
Visited Dr. Gayatri D. Khairnar? 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.