Consultant neonatologist specializing in newborn intensive care
Experience
—
Languages
English, English Hindi, Hindi
Location
Dubai
Sees
children
Dr. Shiva Shankar is a neonatologist at Dubai Health in Dubai, specializing in the care of newborns and infants in critical condition. With expertise in neonatology, he provides comprehensive assessment and management of premature infants, full-term newborns with complications, and other conditions requiring specialized newborn care.
Dr. Shankar works in the neonatal intensive care setting, addressing the complex medical needs of vulnerable newborn patients. His practice encompasses the full spectrum of neonatal conditions and their acute management.
Extracted from the doctor's hospital profile — patient-friendly terms
Neonatologist
Dubai Health, United Arab Emirates
Consultations are available in English, English Hindi, Hindi.
Dubai Health — Al Jalila Children's Hospital .doctorInformationSelect .doctorNormalBtn .doctorNormalBtnGroup a.dubaiHealthSpecialitiesLink{ color: var(--dh-primary,#002F70); } .direction-rtl .doctorInformationSelect .doctorNormalBtn .doctorNormalBtnGroup a.dubaiHealthSpecialitiesLink::after { transform: translateX(-50%) rotate(-270deg); left: 15px; right: unset; } .direction-rtl .doctorInformationSelect .doctorNormalBtn .doctorNormalBtnGroup a.dubaiHealthSpecialitiesLink { padding: 6px 20px 6px 40px; }, Dubai.
Yes — this doctor sees children.
Commonly treated: Birth Defects, Jaundice in Newborns, Neonatal Infections, Newborn Respiratory Distress, Premature Birth Complications.
Profile compiled from Dubai Health's public website (see original profile via the booking link). Data is informational, not medical advice.
Al Jalila Children's Specialty Hospital: 3.4★ · 1,204 Google reviews — Google rating for the clinic, not this doctor.
No patient reviews yet — be the first.
Visited Dr. Shiva Shankar? 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.