Saeed Aghebat Bekheir | Translational Research | Research Excellence Award

Dr. Saeed Aghebat Bekheir | Mental Health | Research Excellence Award

PhD Candidate in Toxicology | Tehran University of Medical Sciences | Iran

Dr. Saeed Aghebat Bekheir is a dedicated researcher and PhD candidate in Toxicology at Tehran University of Medical Sciences, working under the mentorship of Prof. Abdollahi. His research focuses on mitochondrial toxicology, cardiotoxicity, and mechanistic modeling of toxin-induced bioenergetic failure, with a particular emphasis on developing therapeutic strategies for aluminum phosphide–induced mitochondrial dysfunction. Dr. Aghebat Bekheir has demonstrated expertise in a wide range of experimental approaches, including in vivo animal studies, cellular and molecular assays, and in vitro toxicological models, integrating mechanistic toxicology with translational research to address acute mitochondrial injury and cardiotoxicity. His scholarly contributions are reflected in several peer-reviewed publications in high-impact journals, and he actively serves as a reviewer for multiple journals in toxicology and biomedical sciences, highlighting his commitment to advancing scientific rigor and dissemination. Collaboratively, he engages in research partnerships within the toxicology and mitochondrial research community, fostering interdisciplinary approaches to environmental and translational toxicology challenges. His work contributes to a deeper understanding of oxidative stress, bioenergetic disturbances, and cardiotoxic mechanisms, with broader implications for public health and therapeutic innovation. Beyond his laboratory and scholarly pursuits, Dr. Aghebat Bekheir’s research emphasizes societal relevance by addressing environmental toxicants and their impacts on human health, providing foundational knowledge for developing interventions to mitigate toxicity-related diseases. Through his professional memberships, editorial activities, and collaborative initiatives, he actively contributes to shaping the global toxicology landscape, promoting evidence-based strategies, and inspiring emerging researchers in the field. His ongoing research underscores a commitment to integrating scientific excellence with practical solutions for human health, reflecting both scholarly distinction and societal impact. He has 23 citations from 5 documents with an h-index of 3.

Profiles: Google Scholar | Scopus

Featured Publications

1. Ghanati, K., Jahanbakhsh, M., Shakoori, A., Aghebat-Bekheir, S., … (2024). The association between polycystic ovary syndrome and environmental pollutants based on animal and human study; a systematic review.

2. Ghanati, K., Eghbaljoo, H., Akbari, N., Mazaheri, Y., Aghebat-Bekheir, S., … (2023). Determination of melamine contamination in milk with various packaging: A risk assessment study.

3. Aghebat-Bekheir, S., Abdollahi, M. (2024). Discovering the most impactful treatments for aluminum phosphide cardiotoxicity gleaned from systematic review of animal studies.

4. Reihani, A., Marboutian, F., Aghebat-Bekheir, S., Reyhani, A., Akhgari, M. (2024). Diagnostic aspects of paraquat in the forensic toxicology: A systematic review.

5. Aghebat-Bekheir, S., Hekmatirad, S., Asar, N., Abdollahi, M. (n.d.). Aluminum phosphide as a model for exploring acute mitochondrial disorders.

Jian-Yu Que | Mental Health | Research Excellence Award

Dr. Jian-Yu Que | Mental Health | Research Excellence Award

Associate Chief Physician | Xiamen Xianyue Hospital | China

Jian-Yu Que is an associate chief physician and head of the Clinical Medical Research Center at Xiamen Xianyue Hospital, with advanced medical training from Qiqihar Medical University and postgraduate degrees from Peking University, and is internationally recognized for contributions to psychiatry and sleep medicine. His academic expertise centers on the complex relationships between sleep disturbances and psychiatric disorders, as well as the evaluation of sleep-based interventions for improving mental health outcomes across vulnerable populations, particularly children and adolescents. He has produced an extensive body of high-impact scientific literature indexed in major global databases, with multiple first and corresponding authorship contributions in leading journals such as PLOS Medicine, Molecular Psychiatry, and Behavioral Sleep Medicine, reflecting a strong and sustained research output with notable scholarly influence. His work as lead investigator on large-scale population studies has advanced understanding of the interconnections among insomnia, chronotype, trauma exposure, emotional disorders, suicidal ideation, and health-risk behaviors, generating evidence that directly informs youth mental health policy and early prevention strategies. In addition to independent research leadership, he maintains active national and international collaborations with senior scientists at Peking University and The Chinese University of Hong Kong, including participation in pioneering clinical trials on digital interventions for insomnia in Asia. He also contributes to academic stewardship as a guest editor for Frontiers in Psychiatry and holds leadership roles in national professional societies related to sleep and psychiatric medicine. Through integrated clinical research, policy-relevant population studies, and collaborative innovation, his work has generated significant societal impact by strengthening evidence-based prevention, improving access to mental health interventions, and advancing the scientific foundation of sleep-psychiatry integration in public health systems. He has 3572 citations from 61 documents with an h-index of 22.

Profile: Scopus 

Featured Publications

1. Childhood trauma and disordered eating behaviors in youth: Examining individual types, cumulative numbers, and latent patterns. (2025).

2. From single to multiple: The association of childhood trauma with frequent nightmares among youth. (2025).

3. Genetic insights into the role of mitochondria-related genes in mental disorders: An integrative multi-omics analysis. (2025).

4. The association between couple relationships and sleep: A systematic review and meta-analysis. (2025).

5. Effectiveness of app-based cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia on preventing major depressive disorder in youth with insomnia and subclinical depression: A randomized clinical trial. (2025).

Yan-Feng Zhou | Public Health | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Yan-Feng Zhou | Public Health | Best Researcher Award

Associate professor | Guangxi Medical University | China

Yan-Feng Zhou is an Associate Professor at Guangxi Medical University and a leading epidemiologist specializing in chronic disease prevention and healthy aging. Their research integrates large population-based cohorts with multi-omics approaches to elucidate the environmental, psychosocial, and biological determinants of cardiovascular disease, cognitive decline, and age-related chronic conditions. Zhou has played a pivotal role in establishing and directing major longitudinal cohorts in China, creating essential platforms for the study of ethnic and regional disparities in aging health and chronic disease risk. Their work is widely recognized for bridging population epidemiology with molecular mechanisms, particularly in the investigation of metal exposure, epigenetic regulation, and the gut–brain axis in cognitive aging. Zhou’s research has been disseminated through leading international journals including JAMA Network Open, Diabetologia, Hypertension, and Age and Aging, reflecting strong academic impact and global visibility, with consistent citation of their contributions in the scientific literature. They have secured sustained competitive research support from national and regional funding agencies and actively collaborate with multidisciplinary teams spanning public health, clinical medicine, environmental sciences, and molecular biology. Beyond research productivity, Zhou is deeply committed to academic mentorship, fostering the development of emerging scientists in epidemiology and preventive medicine. Their translational work has informed risk assessment strategies and evidence-based approaches for chronic disease prevention, contributing to improved population health and public health policy. Through an integrated program that connects exposure science, omics biology, and longitudinal population research, Zhou continues to shape contemporary understanding of aging, environmental health, and chronic disease prevention with meaningful societal and scientific impact.

Profile: ORCID 

Featured Publications

1. Gao, J.-L., Deng, H., Wang, G.-D., Deng, H.-L., Feng, D.-Y., Wu, S.-L., Chen, S.-H., & Zhou, Y.-F. (2025). Time-dependent association between progression of arterial stiffness and risk of incident chronic kidney disease: A cohort study in China.

2. Yuan, R., Tong, Z., Chen, J.-X., Wang, Y., & Zhou, Y.-F. (2024). Global burden of ischemic heart disease in adolescents and young adults, 1990–2019.

3. Zhou, Y.-F., Chen, S., Chen, J.-X., Chen, S., Wang, G., Pan, X.-F., Wu, S., & Pan, A. (2024). Cost-effectiveness of a workplace-based hypertension management program in real-world practice in the Kailuan Study.

4. Zhou, Y.-F., Song, X.-Y., Pan, A., & Koh, W.-P. (2023). Nutrition and healthy ageing in Asia: A systematic review.

5. Pan, A., Zhou, Y.-F., & Liu, G. (2023). Associations of clinical risk factors and novel biomarkers with age at onset of type 2 diabetes.

Marta Kisiel | Occupational Health | Research Excellence Award

Dr. Marta Kisiel | Occupational Health | Research Excellence Award 

Associate Professor | Uppsala University | Sweden

Marta A. Kisiel is a specialist physician and Associate Professor in Occupational and Environmental Medicine at Uppsala University and Uppsala University Hospital, with an interdisciplinary background spanning medicine, polymer chemistry, and environmental health sciences. Her academic profile is distinguished by a strong integration of clinical practice and translational research, with a primary focus on the health effects of environmental and occupational exposures, post-viral conditions, work capacity, quality of life, respiratory function, and biological markers of disease. She has led and contributed to major research initiatives on post-COVID conditions and socioeconomic inequalities in environmental health risks, supported by competitive national foundations and regional research councils. Her publication record reflects sustained productivity in high-quality peer-reviewed journals with consistent citation impact, demonstrating both scientific rigor and international visibility. Dr. Kisiel maintains active collaborations with multidisciplinary teams across Sweden and internationally, including partnerships in clinical medicine, public health, and preventive psychiatry, and she has been instrumental in establishing cross-specialty clinical forums that bridge pulmonology, dermatology, and occupational medicine. As a principal investigator and supervisor, she plays a central role in training doctoral candidates and mentoring early-career clinicians and researchers, while also contributing extensively to undergraduate and specialist medical education through course leadership, thesis supervision, and problem-based learning. Beyond academia, she serves as an expert advisor to regional health authorities on evidence-based care for post-COVID conditions, contributes to national clinical knowledge platforms, and regularly acts as peer reviewer and committee member within the scientific community. Through her combined research, teaching, clinical leadership, and policy advisory work, Dr. Kisiel has achieved significant societal impact by strengthening occupational health practice, informing public health decision-making, and advancing care for individuals affected by environmentally and work-related diseases.  She has 824 citations from 51 documents with an h-index of 16.

Profiles: Google Scholar | Scopus | ORCID

Featured Publications

1. Thambamroong, T., Seetalarom, K., Saichaemchan, S., Pumsutas, Y., & colleagues. (2022). Efficacy of curcumin on treating cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome in locally or advanced head and neck cancer: A double-blind, placebo-controlled randomised phase IIa trial.

2. Chirapongsathorn, S., Rintaravitoon, W., Tangjaturonrasme, B., & colleagues. (2025). Effect of a ketogenic diet on metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) progression: A randomized controlled trial.

3. Chirapongsathorn, S., Rintaravitoon, W., Tangjaturonrasme, B., & colleagues. (2023). Effect of a ketogenic diet on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) progression: A randomized controlled trial.

4. Thambamroong, T., Seetalarom, K., Saichaemchan, S., Pumsutas, Y., & colleagues. (2022). Efficacy of curcumin on treating cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome in locally or advanced head and neck cancer: A double-blind, placebo-controlled randomised trial.

5. Satirapoj, B., Varothai, N., Boonyagarn, N., Pumsutas, Y., Chotsriluecha, S., & colleagues. (2020). Effect of renal specific oral nutrition (ONCE Renal) on dietary intake and serum electrolytes in chronic kidney disease stage IV.

Yanisa Pumsutas | Public Health | Research Excellence Award

Ms. Yanisa Pumsutas | Public Health | Research Excellence Award

Research assistant | International Health Policy Program | Thailand

Miss Yanisa Pumsutas is a Thai nutrition scientist and registered dietitian serving as a Research Assistant at the Health Promotion Policy Research Center under the International Health Policy Foundation in Thailand, with a strong academic foundation in nutrition and dietetics from Chulalongkorn University and advanced postgraduate training at Mahidol University. Her professional expertise spans public health nutrition, health promotion policy, noncommunicable diseases, metabolic disorders, eating behavior, and clinical nutrition counseling. She is a licensed dietitian recognized by the Thai Dietetics Council and has held key clinical roles at leading tertiary hospitals including Bumrungrad International Hospital and Phramongkutklao Hospital, where she contributed extensively to patient care, multidisciplinary nutrition management, and professional training. Her research portfolio includes multiple peer reviewed publications as both first author and co author in high impact international journals covering obesogenic environments, refugee health access, sleep and physical activity in older adults, metabolic liver disease, work related obesity, renal nutrition, and cancer cachexia. She has also been actively involved in randomized clinical trials, systematic and scoping reviews, and community based nutrition research. Her work is widely cited and demonstrates strong interdisciplinary collaboration with national and international public health, medical, and policy research teams. In addition to research, she has made significant contributions to academic service through professional nutrition societies, where she has supported scientific conferences, delivered specialized training workshops, and contributed to policy and practice dissemination. Her work has generated meaningful societal impact by supporting evidence based nutrition policy, strengthening clinical nutrition services, improving health literacy, and advancing equitable access to healthcare for vulnerable populations, reflecting her strong commitment to translating nutritional science into sustainable public health outcomes. She has 27 citations from 5 documents with an h-index of 2.

Profiles: Google Scholar | Scopus | ORCID

Featured Publications

1. Thambamroong, T., Seetalarom, K., Saichaemchan, S., Pumsutas, Y., & colleagues. (2022). Efficacy of curcumin on treating cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome in locally or advanced head and neck cancer: A double-blind, placebo-controlled randomised phase IIa trial.

2. Chirapongsathorn, S., Rintaravitoon, W., Tangjaturonrasme, B., & colleagues. (2025). Effect of a ketogenic diet on metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) progression: A randomized controlled trial.

3. Chirapongsathorn, S., Rintaravitoon, W., Tangjaturonrasme, B., & colleagues. (2023). Effect of a ketogenic diet on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) progression: A randomized controlled trial.

4. Thambamroong, T., Seetalarom, K., Saichaemchan, S., Pumsutas, Y., & colleagues. (2022). Efficacy of curcumin on treating cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome in locally or advanced head and neck cancer: A double-blind, placebo-controlled randomised trial.

5. Satirapoj, B., Varothai, N., Boonyagarn, N., Pumsutas, Y., Chotsriluecha, S., & colleagues. (2020). Effect of renal specific oral nutrition (ONCE Renal) on dietary intake and serum electrolytes in chronic kidney disease.

Matiyas Mamo Bekele | Clinical Medicine | Research Excellence Award

Mr. Matiyas Mamo Bekele | Clinical Medicine | Research Excellence Award

lecturer | University of Gondar | Ethiopia

Matiyas Mamo Bekele is an emerging optometry professional and clinical researcher whose work spans community eye health, refractive error–related quality of life, low-vision challenges, spectacle use, and the broader landscape of preventable visual impairment. As an academic and clinician at the University of Gondar, he integrates teaching, research, and service, contributing to the development of future optometrists, ophthalmic nurses, and ophthalmology residents while also providing comprehensive eye care through both static and outreach platforms. His scholarly work demonstrates a strong orientation toward population-based ophthalmic research, with multiple peer-reviewed publications addressing eye care utilization patterns, spectacle coverage, knowledge and attitudes toward vision correction, and the burden of ocular diseases among diverse communities and at-risk groups, including individuals with diabetes. His collaborative projects with multidisciplinary teams across hospitals, academic institutions, and public health units reflect a commitment to generating evidence that informs national strategies for equitable eye health access. Through his engagement in systematic reviews, clinical investigations, and community-focused studies, he contributes to a growing body of knowledge that supports early detection, appropriate referral pathways, and improved service delivery in low-resource settings. His involvement in national professional bodies and international volunteer organizations further underscores his dedication to strengthening training systems, capacity building, and vision-related advocacy. As a research advisor and mentor, he supports emerging scholars in pursuing impactful inquiry that addresses gaps in vision care and public health. His continuing work advances the understanding of refractive error needs, ocular morbidities, and community-based approaches to blindness prevention, positioned toward improving quality of life and reducing avoidable vision loss across broader populations. He has 10 citations from 13 documents with an h-index of 2.

Profiles: Scopus | ORCID

Featured Publications

1. Hulleck, A. A., Mohan, D. M., Abdallah, N., El Rich, M., & Khalaf, K. (2022). Present and future of gait assessment in clinical practice: Towards the application of novel trends and technologies.

2. Mohan, D. M., Khandoker, A. H., Wasti, S. A., Ismail Alali, S. I. I., & colleagues. (2021). Assessment methods of post-stroke gait: A scoping review of technology-driven approaches to gait characterization and analysis.

3. Jelinek, H. F., Osman, W. M., Khandoker, A. H., Khalaf, K., Lee, S., Almahmeed, W., & colleagues. (2017). Clinical profiles, comorbidities and complications of type 2 diabetes mellitus in patients from United Arab Emirates.

4. Maschirow, L., Khalaf, K., Al-Aubaidy, H. A., & Jelinek, H. F. (2015). Inflammation, coagulation, endothelial dysfunction and oxidative stress in prediabetes—Biomarkers as a possible tool for early disease detection for rural screening.

5. Witzel, I. I., Jelinek, H. F., Khalaf, K., Lee, S., Khandoker, A. H., & Alsafar, H. (2015). Identifying common genetic risk factors of diabetic neuropathies.

Kinda Khalaf | Biomedical Engineering | Best Researcher Award

Prof. Kinda Khalaf | Biomedical Engineering | Best Researcher Award

Associate Dean | Khalifa University | United Arab Emirates

Dr. Kinda Khalaf is a distinguished biomedical and mechanical engineering scholar whose career spans academic leadership, interdisciplinary research, and sustained contributions to health sciences and engineering education. As a senior academic leader, she has guided undergraduate medical and health sciences programs, chaired major curriculum and accreditation committees, and advanced quality assurance frameworks that have strengthened institutional excellence and global competitiveness. Her expertise lies at the intersection of biomechanics, musculoskeletal modeling, physiological systems engineering, biomedical device design, and innovative pedagogical practices. She has developed and delivered a wide spectrum of engineering and biomedical courses, built state-of-the-art teaching and research laboratories, and led accreditation efforts for multiple engineering and health-related programs. Dr. Khalaf has an extensive publication record and has achieved strong citation visibility in areas such as spinal and orthopedic biomechanics, human motion modeling, movement dysfunction associated with neurological and metabolic disorders, and the development of assistive and rehabilitative technologies. Her collaborative research portfolio includes partnerships with major hospitals, clinical centers, and interdisciplinary university teams, resulting in impactful studies that inform patient care, rehabilitation strategies, and translational biomedical innovations. She has also fostered significant international collaborations aimed at advancing engineering education, curriculum design, and experiential learning through modern instructional approaches. Beyond research and teaching, Dr. Khalaf has been instrumental in promoting undergraduate research, innovation ecosystems, and engineering outreach initiatives, while supporting student recruitment, internships, and career development. Her contributions extend to service on academic councils, integrity and ethics committees, research review boards, and strategic planning groups, reflecting a deep commitment to academic governance. Through her leadership, scholarly output, and dedication to bridging engineering with medicine, Dr. Khalaf has made enduring contributions to both the academic community and broader society, advancing knowledge, strengthening clinical partnerships, and shaping the next generation of biomedical engineers and health science professionals. She has 1922 citations from 161 documents with an h-index of 23.

Profiles: Google Scholar | Scopus | ORCID

Featured Publications

1. Hulleck, A. A., Mohan, D. M., Abdallah, N., El Rich, M., & Khalaf, K. (2022). Present and future of gait assessment in clinical practice: Towards the application of novel trends and technologies.

2. Mohan, D. M., Khandoker, A. H., Wasti, S. A., Ismail Alali, S. I. I., & colleagues. (2021). Assessment methods of post-stroke gait: A scoping review of technology-driven approaches to gait characterization and analysis.

3. Jelinek, H. F., Osman, W. M., Khandoker, A. H., Khalaf, K., Lee, S., Almahmeed, W., & colleagues. (2017). Clinical profiles, comorbidities and complications of type 2 diabetes mellitus in patients from United Arab Emirates.

4. Maschirow, L., Khalaf, K., Al-Aubaidy, H. A., & Jelinek, H. F. (2015). Inflammation, coagulation, endothelial dysfunction and oxidative stress in prediabetes—Biomarkers as a possible tool for early disease detection for rural screening.

5. Witzel, I. I., Jelinek, H. F., Khalaf, K., Lee, S., Khandoker, A. H., & Alsafar, H. (2015). Identifying common genetic risk factors of diabetic neuropathies.

Fang Yan | Chronic Diseases | Editorial Board Member

Assist. Prof. Dr. Fang Yan | Chronic Diseases | Editorial Board Member

Assistant Professor | Central South University | China

Dr. Fang Yan is an accomplished nursing scientist whose scholarship bridges gerontological care, HIV-related psychosocial health, and gender-focused public health, reflecting a rare integration of clinical insight, social inquiry, and intervention development. With academic training spanning a Bachelor’s, Master’s, Medical Doctoral degree from Xiangya Nursing School at Central South University, and a PhD from Flinders University, she has cultivated a deeply interdisciplinary approach that elevates the rigor and relevance of nursing research. Her work is grounded in both community and clinical realities, ranging from urinary incontinence management among older adults to the complex psychosocial vulnerabilities experienced by the spouses of men who have sex with men (MSM)—groups historically underrepresented in evidence-informed care frameworks. As an Assistant Professor at Xiangya Nursing School, Dr. Yan has advanced a portfolio that demonstrates methodological strength, including randomized controlled trials, systematic integrative reviews, qualitative inquiry, scale development, and mixed-method modeling. This diversity reflects not only technical competence but an ability to generate culturally informed, contextually attuned recommendations that translate research into practice. Her nurse-led hybrid self-management model for community-dwelling older adults with urinary incontinence exemplifies translational innovation, offering a scalable intervention capable of significantly improving autonomy, symptom control, and quality of life among aging populations—a demographic urgency in many regions. Equally impactful is her extensive research on the wives of MSM in China, where she examined intimate partner violence, coping mechanisms, depression, suicidal behavior, and HIV-related vulnerabilities, producing some of the earliest nursing-led insights into this hidden population. Her publications in leading journals such as the International Journal of Nursing Studies, Journal of Advanced Nursing, and Journal of Interpersonal Violence have positioned her as a rising scholar whose work contributes meaningfully to global nursing discourse. Dr. Yan’s research excellence has been recognized through numerous competitive awards—including the Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Doctoral Thesis Excellence, China Scholarship Council support, and multiple institutional accolades—affirming both scientific merit and societal relevance. Her professional service, including roles within the Hunan Nursing Association and Chinese Nursing Association, further demonstrates leadership and commitment to advancing nursing education, policy, and community impact. While her current trajectory is distinguished by strong research output, expanding international collaboration networks, scaling pilot interventions into multicenter clinical programs, and strengthening cross-cultural comparative research would enhance the global applicability and influence of her work. Future research for Dr. Fang Yan holds significant potential in developing technology-integrated geriatric self-management platforms, advancing precision-tailored psychosocial interventions for families affected by HIV-related stigma, and exploring population-specific aging health strategies across China, Australia, and Hong Kong SAR. By deepening her engagement in implementation science and health-policy translation, she is well-poised to drive transformative models of care that improve quality of life for vulnerable older adults and socially marginalized populations globally.

Profile: ORCID 

Featured Publications

1. Yan, F. (2025). Effectiveness of a nurse-led hybrid self-management program for community-dwelling older people with urinary incontinence: A randomized controlled trial.

2. Yan, F. (2023). Perceptions of primary health care nurses and general practitioners in the care of older people with urinary incontinence.

3. Yan, F. (2023). Construction and application of a hybrid self-management model for community-dwelling older people with urinary incontinence.

4. Yan, F. (2023). Construction and application of a hybrid self-management model for community-dwelling older people with urinary incontinence.

5. Yan, F. (2022). Perceptions and help-seeking behaviours among community-dwelling older people with urinary incontinence: A systematic integrative review.

Maryam koosha | Health Policy | Editorial Board Member

Dr. Maryam koosha | Health Policy | Editorial Board Member

Associate Professor | Institiute for humanities and cultural studies | Iran

Maryam Koosha, PhD, is an accomplished scholar in social welfare whose research spans breast cancer care, women’s health, aging studies, and social policy analysis, with a particular focus on how structural, cultural, and socioeconomic dynamics shape health outcomes in Iran. Her work demonstrates a sustained commitment to integrating social sciences with public health to advance patient-centered care and evidence-informed policymaking. Dr. Koosha has contributed extensively to the understanding of breast cancer experiences, including screening strategies, supportive care needs, lifestyle-related risk factors, and coping behaviors, collaborating widely with medical, psychosocial, and public health researchers across multidisciplinary platforms. Her publications in reputable national and international journals reflect the breadth of her scholarship, covering systematic and scoping reviews, randomized clinical trial collaborations, qualitative studies, and policy development research. Beyond oncology, she has emerged as a leading voice in gerontology and social health, developing policy models for enhancing the social well-being of older adults, analyzing policy gaps, and offering strategic directions for strengthening support systems in the context of rapid demographic change and the feminization of aging. Her academic contributions extend to cultural studies, social discourse analysis, and comparative welfare research, reinforcing her role as a thinker who bridges theory and applied policy. Dr. Koosha’s body of work reflects meaningful societal impact, informing service delivery, shaping evidence-based interventions, and providing insight for future policy reforms aimed at promoting equity, resilience, and community-centered support structures. Through her interdisciplinary collaborations, rigorous scholarship, and focus on vulnerable populations, she continues to advance the understanding of how social welfare principles can improve health outcomes and quality of life within evolving social and cultural landscapes.

Profile: Google Scholar

Featured Publications

1. Omidi, Z., Koosha, M., Nazeri, N., Khosravi, N., Zolfaghari, S., & Haghighat, S. (2022). Status of breast cancer screening strategies and indicators in Iran: A scoping review.

2. Farajivafa, V., Khosravi, N., Rezaee, N., Koosha, M., & Haghighat, S. (2023). Effectiveness of home-based exercise in breast cancer survivors: A randomized clinical trial.

3. Khosravi, N., Nazeri, N., Farajivafa, V., Olfatbakhsh, A., Atashi, A., Koosha, M., … (2019). Supportive care of breast cancer patients in Iran: A systematic review.

4. Koosha, M., Haghighat, S., Karampoor, R., Shekarbeygi, A., Bahrami, A., … (2017). Evaluation of socio-economic status and its impact on coping behavior of patients with breast cancer.

5. Koosha, M., Hezarjaribi, J., Allameh, H., Panahi, M. A., & Lalegani, A. (2022). Designing a policy model for enhancing social health of the elderly.

Mai Kadry | Global Health | Editorial Board Member

Assist. Prof. Dr. Mai Kadry | Global Health | Editorial Board Member 

Research Scientist | National Research Center | Egypt

Mai O. Kadry is a distinguished researcher at the National Research Centre in Giza, Egypt, recognized for her multidisciplinary contributions across metabolomics, molecular oncology, nanomedicine, toxicology, and women’s health research. Her scientific portfolio reflects a sustained commitment to unraveling the biochemical and molecular mechanisms underpinning complex diseases, with a particular focus on metabolic disorders, cancer progression, reproductive toxicology, and innovative therapeutic strategies. Through a substantial body of peer-reviewed publications, she has advanced understanding of how metabolic signatures, genomic interactions, and molecular signaling pathways can be leveraged to improve disease diagnosis, treatment response, and therapeutic safety. Her work frequently integrates serum metabolomics, network pharmacology, lipidomics, nanostructure-based drug delivery, and experimental validation models, enabling a comprehensive systems-level view of disease processes. She has collaborated extensively with national and international scientists, contributing to multidisciplinary studies on phytotherapeutics for endocrine disorders, nanoscale interventions to mitigate chemotherapeutic toxicity, and molecular crosstalk driving drug resistance in cancer cells. Her authorship and citation footprint reflect broad scholarly engagement, while her active participation in multi-institutional teams has supported knowledge exchange and capacity building within the biomedical research community. Kadry’s investigations into natural product therapeutics, oxidative brain injury mechanisms, autophagy regulation, and emerging RNA-based biomarkers contribute to public health and precision medicine, offering insights with potential translational relevance to women’s health, oncology, toxicology, and environmental exposure science. Collectively, her work demonstrates a strong commitment to scientific innovation, interdisciplinary integration, and the societal importance of developing safer, more effective therapeutic approaches that align with global health priorities. She has 462 citations from 50 documents with an h-index of 12.

Profiles: Scopus | ORCID

Featured Publications

1. Kadry, M., Author, A. A., Author, B. B., … (2025). Exploring the therapeutic potential of marjoram (Origanum majorana L.) in polycystic ovary syndrome: Insights from serum metabolomics, network pharmacology and experimental validation.

2. Kadry, M., & Author, A. A. (2025). Novel insights into SNORD-78 and miR-122-5P: The predicted diagnostic indexes of lung cancer—Drug-loaded liposome formulations competing methylcholanthrene-induced lung cancer.

3. Kadry, M., Author, A. A., Author, B. B., Author, C. C., & Author, D. D. (2025). Oxidative brain injury ascending from DMBA: Metabolomics and BRAF3/FKBR/A2m molecular signaling crosstalk.

4. Kadry, M., Author, A. A., Author, B. B., … (2025). Metabolomics integrated genomics approach: Understanding multidrug resistance phenotype in MCF-7 breast cancer cells exposed to doxorubicin and ABCA1/EGFR/PI3K/PTEN crosstalk.

5. Kadry, M., Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (2025). Titanium nanostructure mitigating doxorubicin-induced testicular toxicity in rats via regulating major autophagy signaling pathways.