Senior Specialist in Emergency Medicine
Experience
—
Languages
Arabic, English, English Arabic
Location
Hatta, Dubai
Sees
children, adults, seniors
Dr. Naglaa Abdel Hamied is a Senior Specialist in General Emergency Medicine at Dubai Health in Dubai. She brings clinical expertise to emergency care, working with patients presenting with acute medical and trauma situations across all age groups in a busy emergency department setting.
Her work in emergency medicine involves rapid assessment and initial management of urgent and life-threatening conditions, from chest pain and respiratory distress to injuries and poisonings. She is fluent in both English and Arabic, which supports effective communication with diverse patient populations in the UAE.
Extracted from the doctor's hospital profile — patient-friendly terms
Senior Specialist, General Emergency Medicine
Dubai Health, United Arab Emirates
Consultations are available in Arabic, English, English Arabic.
Dubai Health — Hatta 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; }, Hatta, Dubai.
Yes — this doctor sees children.
Commonly treated: Acute Illness, Chest Pain, Poisoning, Respiratory Distress, Trauma.
Profile compiled from Dubai Health's public website (see original profile via the booking link). Data is informational, not medical advice.
Hatta Hospital | مستشفى حتا: 3.8★ · 110 Google reviews — Google rating for the clinic, not this doctor.
No patient reviews yet — be the first.
Visited Dr. Naglaa Abdel Hamied? 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.