Camilla Stoltenberg
Camilla Stoltenberg (born 5 February 1958) is a Norwegian physician and researcher. Since 13 August 2012, she has been Director-General of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health.
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Early life and education
Stoltenberg attended Oslo Waldorf School and studied sociology and medicine at the University of Oslo, where she graduated with the cand.med. degree. She later obtained a research doctorate (dr.med.) at the same university. She has also studied medical anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley.[1]
Career
Stoltenberg began her career with an internship in the Helgeland region before working as a registrar at Rikshospitalet University Hospital, and later in casualty departments in both Aurskog-Høland and Oslo.
She was affiliated to the FAFO study of living conditions in Gaza, the West Bank and Jerusalem. Later, she took part in a mission for ECON concerning biotechnology at the turn of the millennium.
For her doctoral thesis, Stoltenberg studied infant death, social inequality and consanguineous marriage in immigrant groups.[2][3] She was a visiting scholar at Columbia University before being employed at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health in 2001. Since 2002, Stoltenberg has held various posts at the institute; Director of the Epidemiology division, Assistant Director-General and now Director-General.
Stoltenberg has a crucial role in the National Health Registry Project.[4] The project aims to modernise the health registries in Norway. Stoltenberg was also the leader of the national FUGE platform, Biobanks for Health, and is now co-chair of Biobank Norway,[5] a national infrastructure for research biobanks. She has had core functions in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort (MoBa)[6] study since 2001, and is leading the Norwegian part of the Autism Birth Cohort study.[7] Her research focuses on causes and risk factors for autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders.
Jon Sudbø case
Stoltenberg played an important role in uncovering that a medical article submitted by Jon Sudbø to the Lancet was an academic fraud.
Other activities
- The Lancet Public Health, Member of the Editorial Advisory Board (since 2016)[8]
Personal life
She is the daughter of Thorvald and Karin Stoltenberg and the sister of Jens Stoltenberg and Nini Stoltenberg.
References
- http://www.dn.no/magasinet/2014/12/26/2129/Portrettet/helsessteren
- Birth Defects and Parental Consanguinity in Norway
- Influence of Consanguinity and Maternal Education on Risk of Stillbirth and Infant Death in Norway, 1967–1993
- National Health Registry Project
- From Biobanks for health to Biobank Norway
- Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study Archived December 7, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
- Autism Birth Cohort Study
- Editorial Advisory Board The Lancet.