Specialist in medical critical care and intensive care management
Experience
—
Languages
Arabic, English, English Arabic
Location
Dubai
Sees
adults, seniors
Dr. Khalid Mohammad Atef Omar Hassan is a medical critical care specialist based at Dubai Health in Dubai. He provides intensive care management for patients with serious acute illnesses and complex medical conditions requiring hospital-level monitoring and intervention.
Dr. Hassan works within the medical critical care specialty, focusing on the diagnosis, treatment, and ongoing care of critically ill patients. His practice encompasses the full range of acute medical emergencies and complications requiring intensive monitoring and specialized therapeutic support.
Extracted from the doctor's hospital profile — patient-friendly terms
Medical Critical Care Specialist
Dubai Health, United Arab Emirates
Consultations are available in Arabic, English, English Arabic.
Dubai Health — Rashid 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.
This doctor primarily sees adults and seniors.
Commonly treated: Acute Heart Failure, Acute Respiratory Failure, Metabolic Disorders, Organ Dysfunction, Sepsis, Severe Infections.
Profile compiled from Dubai Health's public website (see original profile via the booking link). Data is informational, not medical advice.
Rashid Hospital: 3.4★ · 1,537 Google reviews — Google rating for the clinic, not this doctor.
No patient reviews yet — be the first.
Visited Dr. Khalid Mohammad Atef Omar Hassan? 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.