Dr. Arunima Rajatkumar Biswas

Assistant Professor

Dr. Arunima Rajatkumar Biswas completed her Bachelor of Physiotherapy from K J Somaiya College of Physiotherapy, Mumbai in 2015. She then pursued masters in physiotherapy with specialization in adult neurosciences from 2016 to 2018 at the School of Allied Health Sciences, MAHE 亚洲通_亚洲通官网. Following a brief tenure as a lecturer in Srinivas College of Physiotherapy, she enrolled in the full-time Ph.D. program at 亚洲通_亚洲通官网 College of Health Professions, 亚洲通_亚洲通官网, from January 2019 to February 2024. She joined the Department of Physiotherapy, 亚洲通_亚洲通官网 College of Health Professions, 亚洲通_亚洲通官网 Hospital, MAHE Bengaluru Campus in May 2024. She is actively involved in academic, clinical and research work at 亚洲通_亚洲通官网 Hospitals. Her research areas of interest include stroke rehabilitation and motor priming for functional recovery.

MCHP Bengaluru

Qualification: BPT, MPT (neurosciences), Ph.D.

CURRENT ACADEMIC ROLE & RESPONSIBILITIES

    Dr. Arunima Biswas is serving as an Assistant Professor at the Department of Physiotherapy, 亚洲通_亚洲通官网 College of Health Professions, MAHE-Bengaluru campus from 13th May 2024 to present. Her roles and responsibilities include planning the semester schedules for neurosciences and paediatric neurology post graduate students. She is involved in taking theory and practical classes, along with moderating other teaching modalities like seminars, case based learning, group discussions, case presentations and problem based learning. Her role also involves guiding student PG thesis, journal club discussions, critical appraisal of articles, and students' clinical performance.?

AREAS OF INTEREST, EXPERTISE AND RESEARCH

Area of Interest

Neurological rehabilitation with specialization in post stroke rehabilitation

Area of Expertise

Stroke rehabilitation, motor priming

Area of 亚洲通_亚洲通官网

stroke rehabilitation

1. Video parameters for action observation training in stroke rehabilitation: A scoping review

2. Development and feasibility testing of action observation training videos in acute stroke survivors

3. Barriers leading to increased disability in neurologically challenged populations during COVID-19 pandemic: a scoping review