Dr. Ehab Aboualazayem Mohamed Shalaby completed his MBBCH from the Faculty of Medicine, University of Alexandria, Egypt in 1993 with honors. In 1999, he qualified his Master’s Degree in Critical Care Medicine, Toxicology, and Emergency Medicine at the same university.
Dr. Ehab started his clinical practice as a House Officer at Alexandria Main University Hospital, Egypt in 1994. In 1995, he became a Resident in Critical Care Unit and Intensive Care Unit at the same medical facility. He took his medical residency in Intensive Care Units of German Hospital then in El Amin Hospital, Egypt. In 1998, he worked as a Specialist in Critical Care, Intensive Care, and Coronary Care at Alexandria Medical Center (with 192 beds) then at Al-Moassat Hospital (with 500 beds). In 1999, he moved to Kuwait and continued his medical practice as Critical Care and Emergency Registrar Physician at Gaber Al Ahmed Armed Forces Hospital. In 2007, he moved to the UAE and worked as a Specialist in Critical Care Medicine at a large government tertiary hospital in Abu Dhabi. Prior to joining Salma Rehabilitation Hospital, he worked as a Specialist in Critical Care Medicine at SEHA’s Sheikh Shakhbout Medical City in partnership with Mayo Clinic.
Dr. Ehab is well-trained in Basic Life Support by the American Heart Association, Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support by the American Heart Association, Advanced Trauma Life Support, Critical Care Program by the Institute of Critical Care Medicine and Society of Critical Care Medicine. To his credit, he attends local and international conferences.
Dr. Ehab’s areas of expertise include critical care medicine, emergency medicine in adult, pediatric, and urgent care segments, management of critically ill cases in medical, non-traumatic surgical, major trauma, or burn cases in different intensive care levels, cardiac emergencies including cardiac arrest, acute coronary syndrome and complications, arrhythmias, heart disease and other cardiac problems, invasive techniques in critical care medicine, resuscitation management, respiratory failure using invasive or non-invasive modalities, and intoxication.
Dr. Ehab speaks Arabic and English.