Enock Chisati

Associate Professor Kamuzu University of Health Sciences
Malawi Cohort 7

Profile AI

Dr. Enock Chisati is an Associate Professor of Exercise Physiology in the Department of Rehabilitation Sciences at Kamuzu University of Health Sciences (KUHeS), Malawi. Since joining the institution in 2011 (formerly the College of Medicine), he has held several academic leadership roles, including Year Coordinator (2014–2016), Deputy Head of Department (2014–2016), and Head of Department (2016–2020). He holds a PhD in Exercise Physiology from the University of Malawi (2020) and a Master of Science in Exercise Physiology and Sports Sciences from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), obtained in 2014. Dr. Chisati is an accomplished academic with a strong track record of research and scholarly publications in exercise physiology and rehabilitation sciences. In addition to his academic role, he serves in several institutional and professional capacities. He is a member of the College of Medicine Research and Ethics Committee (COMREC), the Academic Standards and Compliance Committee, and the KUHeS Senate. Beyond the university, he is a Board Member of the Malawi Anti-Doping Organisation (MADO), the country contact for the Global Observatory for Physical Activity (GoPA) and the Global Observatory for Physical Education (GoPE), and an Associate Person of the international interRAI network. Dr. Chisati also contributes to global research and scholarship as an Academic Editor for the journal PLOS ONE. His work reflects a strong commitment to advancing research, academic quality, and evidence-informed practice in exercise science, rehabilitation, and population health.

Program Impact AI

The program appears to have had a strong positive impact on the author’s research productivity, with a clear increase in publication activity during the program compared with the period before enrollment. Because the author graduated in 2020 and sufficient time has passed, the more sustained publication output after graduation also suggests that the program may have helped build momentum and a lasting research trajectory.

Latest publications

Most recent scholarly works and contributions.

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