Interviews in the UAE blend role-specific technical questions with practical checks on your visa status, notice period and salary expectations. Employers also value cultural fit in a highly multicultural workforce. Prepare concise, evidence-based answers using the STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result).
1. Do you hold a DHA, HAAD/DoH, MOH or DHCC licence?
State your exact UAE licensing status and eligibility. If not yet licensed, explain where you are in the Dataflow/exam process.
2. How do you ensure patient safety and infection control?
Reference protocols, hand hygiene, documentation, and adherence to JCI/local standards.
3. Describe handling a medical emergency.
Use STAR: triage, action, teamwork, and outcome. Emphasise calm decision-making under pressure.
4. How do you communicate with patients from different cultures?
Show empathy, use of interpreters, and respect for cultural and religious sensitivities common in the UAE.
5. How do you maintain accurate patient records?
Mention EMR systems, confidentiality (data protection), and timely, precise documentation.
6. How do you handle a disagreement with a physician or colleague?
Show professionalism, patient-first focus, and escalation through proper channels.
7. What is your experience with the speciality this role requires?
Give caseload numbers, procedures, and outcomes specific to the speciality.
8. How do you keep your clinical knowledge up to date?
Reference CME/CPD hours, journals, and certifications recognised by UAE regulators.
9. Tell me about yourself.
Give a 60–90 second summary: your current role, key achievements with numbers, relevant UAE experience, and why this role fits your next step. Keep it professional and tailored to the job.
10. Why do you want to work in the UAE?
Mention concrete reasons: career growth, the multicultural environment, tax-free salary, and the company's reputation. Avoid generic answers — link it to your long-term plan.
11. What is your current visa status?
Be honest and specific (employment visa, visit visa, cancelled visa, golden/blue visa, or sponsored). Employers need this to plan onboarding and any visa transfer or new sponsorship.
12. What is your notice period and availability?
State your contractual notice (commonly 30 days in the UAE) and your earliest start date. If you are on a visit visa, say you can join immediately.
13. What are your salary expectations?
Give a researched monthly AED range, noting whether it is all-inclusive or basic + allowances. Reference market data and stay flexible on the package, not just base pay.
14. Why are you leaving your current job?
Stay positive — focus on seeking growth, new challenges or a better fit. Never criticise a previous employer; UAE hiring managers value professionalism and discretion.
15. Describe a challenge you faced and how you handled it.
Use the STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result). Pick a real example with a measurable outcome and emphasise what you personally did.
16. How do you work in a multicultural team?
The UAE workforce is highly diverse. Show cultural awareness, adaptability, clear communication, and respect for different working styles and religious practices (e.g. prayer times, Ramadan hours).
17. Where do you see yourself in five years?
Show ambition aligned with the company. Mention progression, deeper expertise, or leadership — signal you intend to stay and grow rather than use the role as a stop-gap.
18. What are your strengths and weaknesses?
Pick strengths relevant to the job with evidence. For weaknesses, choose a genuine one and describe how you are actively improving it.
19. Do you have any questions for us?
Always say yes. Ask about team structure, success metrics for the role, growth path, or the package details (visa, insurance, allowances). It signals genuine interest.
20. Are you willing to relocate within the UAE or travel?
If true, say yes and show flexibility across emirates. Clarify any constraints honestly so expectations are aligned from the start.