Associate Professor
gkoumantakis@uniwa.gr
Dr. Koumantakis is an Associate Professor of the Department of Physiotherapy, University of West Attica (UNIWA). He has been voted Director of the “Laboratory of Advanced Physiotherapy-L.Ad.Phys.”, a Research and Education Centre of the School of Physiotherapy at UNIWA for a 3-year term of appointment, between 2020-23.
He has a BSc(Hons) Physiotherapy degree from the TEI of ATHENS and an MSc & PhD in Physical Therapy from the Victoria University of Manchester, specialising in active exercise programmes for patients with back pain. Throughout the course of his post-graduate studies he has been a Fellow of the State Scholarships Foundation-ΙΚΥ (Greece) and has also received a complementary Scholarship from the Hospital Savings Association (UK).
He has a sufficient number of publications in International journals, a large number of oral and poster presentations in Greek and international conferences and is currently an Editorial Board Member of 2 International scientific medical journals (World Journal of Orthopedics & International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health). Also, he serves as a reviewer of scientific papers in Greek and International conferences and scientific journals. has undertaken in the past the scientific organisation of two Annual Congresses of the Panhellenic Physiotherapists’ Association [P.S.F.] (2006 & 2008) and has also served as a European Affairs Representative of the Association (2006-2012).
He is a member of the Panhellenic Physiotherapists’ Association, the Greek Scientific Society of Physiotherapy and a past member of the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, the Society for Back Pain Research & the Physiotherapy Research Society. He has been a full-time clinical Physiotherapist at the 401 General Military Hospital of Athens for a number of years (2006-2020). His ongoing research interests involve the application of evidence- based physiotherapy practice in prevention and management of neuromusculoskeletal pathologies, particularly the effects of physiotherapy interventions within a wide age, occupational and physical activity population spectrum.