Ahmet Seven | VR in Healthcare | Research Excellence Award

Assist. Prof. Dr. Ahmet Seven | VR in Healthcare | Research Excellence Award 

Kahramanmaras Sutcu Imam University | Turkey

Ahmet Seven, currently serving as an Assistant Professor at Kahramanmaras Sutcu Imam University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Nursing, Turkiye, is an academic specializing in palliative care, chronic disease management, symptom management, death, and grief studies. With active research involvement in areas such as diabetes, hypertension, and internal medicine nursing, he has completed or is engaged in 30 research projects and has contributed significantly to scientific literature with 35 journal publications indexed in SCI and Scopus, 10 Web of Science–indexed publications, and an H-index of 3 based on Web of Science Core Collection metrics. His academic portfolio further includes the publication of 9 books with ISBN numbers, editorial service as Editor of the Online Turkish Journal of Health Sciences, and professional membership in the Turkish Nurses Association. While he has not yet participated in consultancy or industry-linked projects, he remains committed to advancing healthcare research and contributing to the scientific community. His ongoing work highlights the critical role of artificial intelligence and emerging technologies in easing the workload of nurses and improving the overall efficiency of healthcare systems. He identifies a significant gap in Türkiye regarding nurses’ attitudes toward AI, their adoption levels, and their concerns and expectations about technology integration. His study aims to address these gaps by producing evidence that will guide the development of AI integration strategies in clinical nursing practice, support curriculum enhancements for nursing education, and facilitate smoother technology adaptation processes among healthcare professionals. These insights are expected to inform policymakers and contribute to national strategies for AI-enabled healthcare transformation. Ahmet Seven’s academic and professional engagement is supported by verifiable research profiles, including his Google Scholar account and Web of Science author record, which document his scholarly contributions. He has no patents or formal collaborations to date but continues to develop his expertise through independent academic work and editorial responsibilities. Through his nomination for the Excellence Research Award under the Global VR Research Awards, he certifies that all provided information is accurate and complete and agrees to the terms, conditions, and policies of the awards. His dedication to research, education, and the future of healthcare technology positions him as a noteworthy contributor to the scientific and nursing communities, with ongoing efforts aimed at shaping the future of AI integration in clinical settings.

Featured Publications

Semerci Cakmak, V., Seven, A., & Sonmez Sari, E. (2025). Death anxiety and death literacy among patients with chronic diseases: A cross-sectional study. BMC Psychiatry, 25(1), 299.

Seven, A., Adadioglu, O., & Danc, E. (2021). How do nurses perceive workplace incivility: A cross-sectional study. Journal of Health and Nursing Management, 8(3), 388–396.

Seven, A., & Sert, H. (2021). Nursing care of a patient with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma according to the Watson Human Care Model: A case report. Turkish Journal of Science and Health, 2(1), 118–123.

Sert, H., Dogan, S. G., Cetinkaya, S., Pelin, M., & Seven, A. (2019). Health status of patients hospitalized in the infection unit and information needs of caregivers: A pilot study. Journal of Intensive Care Nursing, 23(2), 57–63.

Seven, A. (2018). Effects of nursing care based on Watson’s Human Care Model on dyspnea management, anxiety, and quality of life in palliative care patients (Master’s thesis). Sakarya University.

Seven, A., & Dulger, H. (2020). Compassion levels of healthcare and care services students and influencing factors. Social Sciences Studies Journal, 6(54), 28–34.

Dulger, H., & Seven, A. (2019). Determination of health perception levels of vocational school of health services students and influencing factors: A cross-sectional study. EJONS International Journal on Mathematics, Engineering and Natural Sciences.

Daniel Daneshvar | VR in Healthcare | Global Impact Award in Virtual Reality

Dr. Daniel Daneshvar | VR in Healthcare | Global Impact Award in Virtual Reality 

 

Harvard Medical School | United States

Daniel Daneshvar, MD, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Harvard Medical School, where he has dedicated his clinical, research, educational, and community outreach efforts to improving care for individuals following traumatic brain injury (TBI), with a special focus on repetitive TBI (rTBI). He serves as Chief of Brain Injury Rehabilitation at Spaulding Rehabilitation and co-Chair of Sports Concussion at Mass General Brigham, providing care for patients with acute and long-term sequelae of TBI while supervising medical students, residents, fellows, and research trainees. Dr. Daneshvar’s work has advanced clinical understanding and diagnostic approaches to TBI, including leading the identification of a novel concussion sign—the spontaneous headshake after a kinematic event (SHAAKE)—now implemented on the sidelines by professional sports organizations including the National Football League and the UK’s Professional Footballers’ Association. He has contributed to national policy and standards through consensus work with the NFL Chief Medical Officer and as a panelist for the Brain Trauma Foundation and Military Traumatic Brain Injury Initiative. To enhance clinical management of rTBI, he developed a retrospective clinical assessment tool for informants of brain donors, now used across multiple North American centers, and created the first positional exposure matrix (PEM) to quantify head impact exposure, which has shaped research on chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and inspired CTE prevention protocols. His scholarship, including lead or senior author publications in JAMA, Acta Neuropathologica, and Nature Communications, has clarified the clinical and neuropathologic features of CTE, contributed to diagnostic criteria, and influenced the NIH’s 2023 acknowledgment of a causal link between rTBI and CTE. Dr. Daneshvar directs a research portfolio exceeding $2.7 million funded by philanthropy, NINDS, and the NFL Players Association, and serves as Senior Editor for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Associate Editor for Frontiers in Neurology. A committed educator, he received Spaulding’s Distinguished Research Mentor Award and Teacher of the Year Award, established a resident research track, and supported over 35 resident publications in the past year. Committed to public health, he founded Team Up Against Concussions and now directs concussion education initiatives at TeachAids, whose CrashCourse program has reached over 500,000 athletes. His outreach includes more than 200 media interviews to advance public understanding of TBI. Through these integrated efforts, Dr. Daneshvar aims to elevate standards of TBI care, prevention, education, and research.

Profile: Orcid

Featured Publications

Daneshvar, D. H., Mez, J., Alosco, M. L., Kiernan, P. T., Sullivan, K., et al. (2023). Association of cumulative head impact force with chronic traumatic encephalopathy neuropathology in American football players. JAMA, 329(12), 1024–1034.

Daneshvar, D. H., Nowinski, C. J., McKee, A. C., & Cantu, R. C. (2023). Repetitive head impacts and chronic traumatic encephalopathy: Applying the Bradford Hill criteria for causation. Acta Neuropathologica, 145(4), 411–432.

McKee, A. C., Cairns, N. J., Dickson, D. W., Folkerth, R. D., Keene, C. D., Daneshvar, D. H., et al. (2021). The revised neuropathologic criteria for the diagnosis of chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Nature Communications, 12, 2291.

Kiernan, P. T., Montenigro, P. H., Daneshvar, D. H., et al. (2022). Age of first exposure to repetitive head impacts and risk of neurobehavioral symptoms in former American football players. Neurology, 98(17), e1765–e1773.

Solomon, G. S., Daneshvar, D. H., et al. (2024). Consensus recommendations on concussion prevention and long-term health outcomes in elite sport. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 58(9), 521–530.

Montenigro, P. H., Baugh, C. M., Daneshvar, D. H., et al. (2017). Clinical subtypes of chronic traumatic encephalopathy: Literature review and proposed research diagnostic criteria. Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy, 9(1), 56