Education
Stoltenberg attended Oslo Waldorf School and studied sociology and medicine at the University of Oslo, where she graduated with the candidate.med. She has also studied medical anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley.
Stoltenberg attended Oslo Waldorf School and studied sociology and medicine at the University of Oslo, where she graduated with the candidate.med. She has also studied medical anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley.
Since 13 August 2012, she has been Director-General of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. Degree. She later obtained a research doctorate (drmed) at the same university. 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. 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.
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, a national infrastructure for research biobanks. Her research focuses on causes and risk factors for autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders.
Stoltenberg played an important role in uncovering that a medical article submitted by Jon Sudbø to the Lancet was an academic fraud.