Georg Hafer | Allgemeine Innere Medizin | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Georg Hafer | Allgemeine Innere Medizin | Best Researcher Award

Dr. med. Georg Hafer, born on August 22, 1976, in Paderborn, Germany, is a distinguished internal medicine specialist currently serving as the Medical Director of the Medical Ambulatory Clinic at Kantonsspital St. Gallen, Switzerland. He completed his medical degree at Justus-Liebig-University Giessen and earned his doctorate in 2008 with high honors. Dr. Hafer has held various clinical roles, progressing from Assistant Physician to Senior Consultant across multiple Swiss institutions. He holds board certification in General Internal Medicine (FMH) and has additional training in psychosomatic medicine and abdominal sonography. With a strong foundation in emergency, internal, surgical, and geriatric psychiatry care, his approach integrates both physical and psychological aspects of health. His career is marked by commitment to interdisciplinary care, patient-centered practice, and continuous professional development. Married and a father of three, he balances his professional responsibilities with a dedication to family life and ethical medical leadership.

Profile

🎓 Education

Dr. Georg Hafer began his academic journey with the Allgemeine Hochschulreife from Neue Oberschule Braunschweig in 1996. He served as a paramedic during his national civil service before entering medical school. From 1997 to 2004, he studied human medicine at Justus-Liebig-University in Giessen, Germany, successfully completing all three stages of the state medical examination. He was licensed to practice medicine in November 2004. His doctoral thesis, completed in 2008, focused on the effects of anesthetics on leukocyte surface receptor expression, earning the distinction “sehr gut.” He further qualified as a specialist in General Internal Medicine (FMH) in 2012. Dr. Hafer expanded his expertise through certified training in psychosomatic and psychosocial medicine (SAPPM) and abdominal sonography, becoming a certified SGUM tutor. His education reflects a commitment to lifelong learning, with academic achievements that integrate foundational science, clinical training, and specialized interdisciplinary competence.

🧪 Experience

Dr. Hafer’s clinical journey spans over two decades in Switzerland, beginning in 2005 as an Assistant Physician at the Kreisspital Muri. He gained experience in internal medicine, geriatrics, surgery, and psychiatry at prestigious institutions including the University Psychiatric Hospital Zurich, Stadtspital Waid, and Kantonsspital St. Gallen. His responsibilities evolved from clinical assistant to Senior Consultant and ultimately to Medical Director. Notably, he led emergency and observation units at Spital Flawil and held key roles in the internal medicine departments at Rorschach and St. Gallen. His practice included intensive care, geriatric, neurological, and ambulatory care. Since 2021, he has served as the leading physician and medical director of the Medical Ambulatory Clinic at Kantonsspital St. Gallen. Dr. Hafer is known for his clinical leadership, team collaboration, and comprehensive patient care, integrating somatic and psychosocial dimensions into medical decision-making and administration.

🏅 Awards and Honors

While the curriculum vitae of Dr. Georg Hafer does not list formal awards or honorary recognitions, his academic and professional milestones highlight a career of merit-based progression and institutional trust. He earned his doctorate in medicine in 2008 with the distinction “sehr gut,” recognizing his scientific contribution to anesthesiology research. He was entrusted with roles of increasing responsibility, from assistant physician to leading physician, across various Swiss hospitals—an implicit acknowledgment of his competence, reliability, and leadership. His certifications, such as FMH in General Internal Medicine and recognized expertise in psychosomatic medicine and abdominal sonography, underscore professional excellence and peer acknowledgment. In clinical institutions such as Kantonsspital St. Gallen and Spital Rorschach, he has held key administrative and training roles, reflecting institutional confidence in his judgment and skills. These achievements speak to a career distinguished by respect, performance, and trust in the Swiss healthcare system.

🔬 Research Focus

Dr. Hafer’s research, as reflected in his doctoral work, centers on the immunological effects of anesthetic agents, examining how substances like ketamine and propofol affect leukocyte surface receptor expression. This study bridges immunology, pharmacology, and critical care—an area vital to understanding inflammatory responses during anesthesia and critical illness. While his later clinical trajectory emphasizes patient care over academia, the scientific rigor of his thesis illustrates a strong foundation in evidence-based medicine. His additional certifications in psychosomatic medicine suggest ongoing interest in the intersection between mental and physical health, a topic gaining increasing relevance in modern internal medicine. Through roles in emergency and intensive medicine, Dr. Hafer has likely contributed to clinical knowledge-sharing, protocol development, and interdisciplinary practice models. Though not extensively published, his research and clinical leadership roles suggest a translational approach—applying scientific insight to optimize diagnostics, care strategies, and long-term health outcomes.

Conclusion

Dr. Georg Hafer exemplifies the integration of clinical excellence, scientific inquiry, and holistic care in internal medicine, progressing through Switzerland’s top hospitals to become a respected leader known for compassionate patient care, interdisciplinary competence, and ethical practice.

 

Publications

Marcelo Luis Berthier | Neuroscience| Best Researcher Award

Prof. Marcelo Luis Berthier | Neuroscience| Best Researcher Award

 

Unversidad de Málaga, Spain

Profile

Education

Marcelo Luis Berthier obtained his degree in Medicine (1972-1976) and completed residency training in Neurosurgery (1977-1980), later specializing in Neurology (1980). He served as a staff neurologist at the Institute of Neurological Research, FLENI, Buenos Aires, Argentina (1980-1989), before becoming a research fellow in the Department of Neurology at Clinic Hospital of Barcelona, Spain (1989-1990). From 1991 to 2000, he was a staff neurologist and physician in charge of the Behavioural Neurology Unit at the Clinic University Hospital of Malaga. He earned a PhD in Neuroscience (cum laude) from the University of Malaga and coordinated the Group of Behavioural Neurology and Dementia of the Spanish Neurological Society (2004-2006). In 2004, he founded and directed the Unit of Cognitive Neurology and Aphasia at the Centro de Investigaciones Médico-Sanitarias, University of Malaga, leading it until 2023. Additionally, he served as the director of the Consolidated Research Group on Cognitive Neuroscience: Aphasia and Related Disorders (UNCA, C-12) at the Instituto de Investigación Biomédica de Málaga (IBIMA – Plataforma BIONAND).

Work experience

Dr. Marcelo L. Berthier Torres has led and contributed to several groundbreaking research projects in cognitive neurology and aphasia. As a co-investigator, he participated in the Telerehabilitation in Aphasia project (2021-2023), which evaluated the effectiveness of telerehabilitation compared to face-to-face therapy and identified predictive biomarkers of response, funded by the Junta de Andalucía. He also served as the principal investigator for a study on the efficacy of combined treatment with donepezil, intensive rehabilitation, and transcranial direct current stimulation in chronic post-stroke aphasia (2016-2019), funded by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III. Additionally, he has contributed to the Proyectos de Generación de Conocimiento “Frontera”, an initiative under the FEDER Andalucía 2014-2020 program, which investigates brain biomarkers for individualized treatment approaches in chronic post-stroke aphasia

Areas of Research

Dr. Marcelo L. Berthier Torres has made significant contributions to the treatment of post-stroke aphasia and speech-language disorders. He conducted the first open-label and randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trials investigating the use of cognitive-enhancing drugs (donepezil and memantine) alone and in combination with standard aphasia therapy or intensive language-action therapy (ILAT) in chronic post-stroke aphasia. His pioneering studies stimulated international research on aphasia pharmacotherapy, leading to clinical translation. Today, donepezil and memantine, alone or combined with therapy, are widely used off-label for post-stroke aphasia and language disturbances associated with neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s disease and primary progressive aphasia.

Publication

  • Revisiting the boundaries of different altered accents profiles

    Cortex
    2025-03 | Journal article
    CONTRIBUTORS: Marcelo L. Berthier; Ignacio Moreno-Torres; Jo Verhoeven; Guadalupe Dávila
  • Turning the Spotlight to Cholinergic Pharmacotherapy of the Human Language System

    CNS Drugs
    2023-07 | Journal article
    CONTRIBUTORS: Guadalupe Dávila; María José Torres-Prioris; Diana López-Barroso; Marcelo L. Berthier
  • Pharmacotherapy for post-stroke aphasia: what are the options?

    Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy
    2023-07-24 | Journal article
    CONTRIBUTORS: Marcelo L. Berthier; Guadalupe Dávila
  • Brain structural and functional correlates of the heterogenous progression of mixed transcortical aphasia

    Brain Structure and Function
    2023-05-31 | Journal article
    CONTRIBUTORS: Diana López-Barroso; José Paredes-Pacheco; María José Torres-Prioris; Guadalupe Dávila; Marcelo L. Berthier
  • Controlling the past, owning the present, and future: cholinergic modulation decreases semantic perseverations in a person with post-stroke aphasia

    Aphasiology
    2022-11-02 | Journal article
    CONTRIBUTORS: Marcelo L. Berthier; Daniel Santana-Moreno; Álvaro Beltrán-Corbellini; Juan C. Criado-Álamo; Lisa Edelkraut; Diana López-Barroso; Guadalupe Dávila; María José Torres-Prioris