Rising Scholars

Apurvakumar Pandya

Assistant Professor at Indian Institute of Public Health Gandhinagar | Gandhinagar , India

Subjects:
Psychology, Healthcare and nursing, Social sciences
Spoken languages:
Hindi
Status:
Available for mentoring and open to collaboration.
Support Level:
Editing Support, Long-term mentoring and support, Short-term mentoring and support
Response Time:
Usually within 48 hours
Support Offered:
Writing, Article planning, Dealing with the publishing process, Language polishing/light editing, Presentation planning, Proposal development, Publication ethics, Responding to peer review, Language editing or proofreading support, Statistical advice, Literature reviews, Policy briefs, Systematic reviews, Theses and dissertation writing, Career mentoring, Data analysis

Work

Subjects:
Psychology, Healthcare and nursing, Social sciences
Research Keywords:
public health, public mental health, health promotion, gender & health, behaviour change communication, patient safety, psychological safety at workplace
Collaboration interests:
Looking forward to collaborate for research and consulting work in the area of public mental health, health technology assessment, and health system and policy research.
Biography:
Dr. Apurvakumar Pandya is a psychologist and social & behavioural scientist, serving as a faculty member at the Indian Institute of Public Health Gandhinagar (IIPHG), Gujarat, India. He co-leads the Centre for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety with Dr. Medha Wadhwa and also leads the Wellbeing Cell at IIPHG. With over 18 years of experience, Dr. Pandya has authored 100+ publications, including 10 book chapters and 6 books, holding an h-index of 20 with over 2300 citations (as of May 23, 2025). His diverse interests include mental health & wellbeing, health promotion, gender & health, behaviour change communication, patient safety, and patient-reported outcomes. He works with vulnerable populations, including LGBTQ individuals, children in street and juvenile justice settings, and women, while also exploring death anxiety, grief, and the use of indigenous counselling for positive health and health system strengthening.

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