Dr. Singh has more than 10 years of medical experience in emergency medicine and acute patient care.
Dr. Singh obtained his Doctor of Medicine (MD) in General Medicine from Odessa National Medical University, Odessa, Ukraine, in 2003. He later obtained Membership of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (MRCEM) in 2022. Throughout his career, he has completed several advanced life support certifications including Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS), Basic Life Support (BLS), and Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS). Dr. Singh is also certified by the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) and holds professional registrations with the Medical Council of India and the Delhi Medical Council.
Dr. Singh has extensive clinical experience working in high-acuity emergency departments and critical care environments. Over the course of his career, he has managed a broad range of emergency presentations including trauma, cardiac emergencies, respiratory conditions, metabolic disturbances, neurological emergencies, and cases involving poisoning. His clinical experience includes performing emergency procedures such as rapid sequence intubation, arterial line placement, airway management, mechanical ventilation, lumbar puncture, pleural taps, bladder catheterization, and intravenous access procedures. Dr. Singh has also worked across inpatient and outpatient settings, contributing to multidisciplinary patient management, emergency response, and acute care stabilization.
Prior to joining Sheikh Sultan Bin Zayed Hospital, Dr. Singh worked as an Emergency Medicine Physician at Zayed Military Hospital in the United Arab Emirates, where he managed a wide spectrum of emergency and critical care cases and played a key role in the stabilization and treatment of patients presenting with life-threatening conditions.
At Sheikh Sultan Bin Zayed Hospital, Dr. Singh’s scope of practice covers adult emergency medical services including the assessment and management of trauma cases, cardiac emergencies, respiratory distress, neurological and metabolic conditions, poisoning and toxicology cases, surgical emergencies, and the stabilization of critically ill patients requiring urgent intervention and multidisciplinary coordination.