SEURO Project Featured in TCD School of Nursing and Midwifery's Inaugural Global Impact Report
Thu Apr 16 2026
The SEURO Project has been selected as a featured case study in the inaugural Global Research Impact Report published by the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Trinity College Dublin (TCD). The report, launched on 16 April 2026, highlights the international reach and societal impact of the School's research and its alignment with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
Titled Global Impact: Advancing the Sustainable Development Goals Through Research, the report draws on citation metrics, testimonials, and a logic model approach to demonstrate how nursing and midwifery research at TCD drives meaningful improvements in healthcare systems and quality of life. The School is ranked 20th globally in nursing and midwifery by the QS World University Rankings 2025, and first in both Ireland and the EU.
The SEURO Project is featured as Case Study 4: Digitalising Health Solutions Across Europe, which examines the challenge of harnessing digital health solutions to address complex healthcare needs. The inclusion of the SEURO Project recognises its contribution to advancing person-centred, technology-enabled care for older adults with multimorbidity, and its broader cross-border collaboration and international research impact.
The report reflects a significant milestone for the School, with research published between 2019 and 2024 cited in 186 policy documents from 74 sources across 20 countries, including organisations such as the World Health Organization, the OECD, and the UK Parliament Select Committee.
At the launch event, SEURO Project Coordinator John Dinsmore delivered a talk representing the project, speaking to its aims, findings, and contribution to the growing body of evidence on digital health solutions for older adults across Europe.
The SEURO Project is proud to be recognised among the four case studies selected to represent the School's global impact, and to contribute to research that influences policy and practice beyond Ireland.
Read the full report here.
Watch the short video here.
