Best Researcher Award
Sedanur Güngör
| Sedanur Güngör | |
|---|---|
| Affiliation | Gazi University |
| Country | Turkey |
| Scopus ID | 59374926100 |
| Documents | 4 |
| Citations | 5 |
| h-index | 1 |
| Subject Area | Public Health |
| Event | Scientific World Research Awards |
| ORCID | 0000-0002-3943-5365 |
Sedanur Güngör is a researcher affiliated with Gazi University whose academic work contributes to the fields of physiotherapy, rehabilitation sciences, and public health. Her scholarly profile includes studies related to hand rehabilitation, telerehabilitation methods, musculoskeletal disorders, and clinical assessment tools.[1] Through collaborative clinical investigations, her research reflects contemporary approaches in rehabilitation practice and patient-centered physiotherapy applications.[2]
Abstract
Sedanur Güngör has developed an emerging academic profile in public health and physiotherapy research through collaborative investigations focusing on rehabilitation sciences and clinical patient outcomes. Her published studies address telerehabilitation, grip strength evaluation, osteoarthritis, tendon repair, and virtual assessment methods in physiotherapy practice.[2] These contributions demonstrate engagement with evidence-based rehabilitation techniques and modern therapeutic technologies. Her scholarly activities also include psychometric and clinical investigations intended to improve patient care and rehabilitation efficiency.[3] The interdisciplinary nature of her work reflects the evolving integration of digital healthcare systems into rehabilitation sciences.
Keywords
Public Health, Physiotherapy, Rehabilitation Sciences, Telerehabilitation, Hand Therapy, Clinical Research
Introduction
Current rehabilitation sciences increasingly incorporate digital assessment methods and patient-centered therapy models. Sedanur Güngör’s research activity aligns with these developments through investigations involving hand rehabilitation and therapeutic evaluation systems.[2]
Research Profile
Her Scopus-indexed publications and ORCID profile document collaborative studies in physiotherapy and rehabilitation medicine. Research topics include tendon repair rehabilitation, osteoarthritis interventions, and psychometric clinical measurements.[1]
Research Contributions
Her published investigations evaluate rehabilitation effectiveness, virtual goniometric measurements, and radial nerve mobilization outcomes in clinical populations.[3] These studies contribute to evidence-based physiotherapy literature.
Publications
- “Virtual goniometric measurement in patients with hand and forearm injuries” — DOI: 10.1080/09638288.2026.2663904
- “Investigation of radial nerve mobilization on pain and grip strength” — DOI: 10.1016/j.physio.2026.102328
Research Impact
The researcher’s contributions support ongoing advancements in rehabilitation assessment and therapeutic monitoring. Her work demonstrates practical relevance for physiotherapy professionals and clinical rehabilitation researchers.[4]
Award Suitability
Sedanur Güngör’s emerging publication profile, interdisciplinary rehabilitation studies, and contributions to clinical physiotherapy research support her recognition for the Best Researcher Award under the Scientific World Research Awards program.[5]
Conclusion
The academic activities of Sedanur Güngör reflect a developing contribution to rehabilitation sciences and public health research through clinically focused physiotherapy investigations and collaborative scholarly work.
External Links
References
- ORCID. (2026). Sedanur Güngör researcher profile and scholarly works.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3943-5365?lang=en - Elsevier. (n.d.). Scopus author details: Sedanur Güngör, Author ID 59374926100. Scopus.
https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=59374926100 - Güngör, S., et al. (2026). Virtual goniometric measurement in patients with hand and forearm injuries.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2026.2663904 - Güngör, S., et al. (2026). Investigation of the effect of radial nerve mobilization on pain, function, and grip strength.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physio.2026.102328 - Scientific World. (2026). Scientific World Research Awards official website.
https://scientificworld.net/