Naja Hulvej Rod
Professor, Head of Section, Professor
Section of Epidemiology
Bartholinsgade 6Q, 2. sal, 24 Øster Farimagsgade 5, Building: 24-2-16
1356 København K
Member of:
Professor Naja Hulvej Rod
Website, ORCID id: 0000-0002-6400-5105
Education and scientific degree
DMSc in Medicine |
University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
2014 |
PhD in Epidemiology |
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), USA |
2007 |
Master of Public Health Science |
University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
2004 |
Current employments
Director |
Copenhagen Health Complexity Center |
2024- |
Professor of Epidemiology |
University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
2019- |
Chair |
Council on Health and Disease Prevention, Denmark |
2023- |
External Faculty |
Institute of Advanced Studies, Amsterdam University, the Netherlands |
2022- |
Publications
Original publications: I have published 190 scientific papers in international peer-reviewed journals, of which I have first-authored 31 and last-authored 70.
Citations: 7357 times cited; h-index: 45
Editorials and letters in peer-reviewed journals: 6
Books and book chapters: 6
Contribution to science
My research deals with large public health challenges including sleep health, health inequality, mental health, and early life adversity. In addition to creating crucial new insights in these areas, I am actively contributing to the advancement the epidemiological methodology with a special focus on causality and complexity. I am the PI of four large projects: the Danish Life Course Cohort (DANLIFE) Study, the Well-being in Hospital Employee Cohort (WHALE) study, the SmartSleep program, and the Corona Minds project. All of which are characterized by combining large data (registers, survey, tracking data) and methods (life course modelling, pattern recognition, quasi-experiments, citizen science) in new and innovative ways, which breaks disciplinary boundaries and goes well beyond state-of-the-art. To embrace complexity in epidemiology, I incorporate complex systems theory thinking and leverage insights across disciplines. I have also been involved in several citizen science project with a direct societal engagement and impact. I have established a strong research group ‘Complexity and Big Data Group’, which has grown considerable during the years due to my successful track record of attracting of external funding. Five recent key publications are listed below. A complete list of my publications is available at My Bibliography.
- Rod NH, Broadbent A, Rod MH, Russo F, Arah OA, Stronks K. Complexity in Epidemiology and Public Health. Addressing Complex Health Problems Through a Mix of Epidemiologic Methods and Data. 2023;34:505-514.
- Rod NH, Bengtsson J, Budtz-Jørgensen E, Clipet-Jensen C, Taylor-Robinson D, Nybo Andersen AM, Dich N, Rieckmann A. Trajectories of childhood adversity and mortality in early adulthood: A population-based cohort study. The Lancet 2020;396:489-497.
- Elsenburg LK, Rieckmann A, Nguyen TL, Bengtsson J, Andersen AN, Taylor-Robinson D, Lange T, Rod NH. Mediation of the parental education gradient in early adult mortality by childhood adversity: a population-based cohort study of more than 1 million children. Lancet Public Health. 2022;7:e146-e155.
- Otte Andersen T, Skovlund Dissing A, Rosenbek Severinsen E, Kryger Jensen A, Thanh Pham V, Varga TV, Hulvej Rod N. Predicting stress and depressive symptoms using high-resolution smartphone data and sleep behavior in Danish adults. Sleep 2022;45(6):zsac067.
- RodNH, Bengtsson J, Elsenburg LK, Taylor-Robinson D, Rieckmann. Hospitalisation patterns among children exposed to childhood adversities: a population-based cohort study of half a million children. The Lancet Publ Health 2021;6:e826-e835.
Leadership
I possess substantial leadership experience, being the Director and founder of the new Copenhagen Health Complexity Center. The Center focuses on integrating complex systems approaches with life course analysis and causal inference methods, involving a diverse team of researchers skilled in epidemiology, medicine, data science, health geography, and social sciences. My previous leadership experience involves having founded and chaired the Section of Epidemiology at the University of Copenhagen from 2018 to 2023. The Section of Epidemiology has thrived under my leadership, evolving into a robust interdisciplinary and international environment dedicated to advancing theoretical epidemiology. During my leadership, successful external funding initiatives and international recruitments resulted in a doubling of the section’s size. Furthermore, I hold the position of Professor of Epidemiology at the University of Copenhagen, where I for years have been leading a vibrant research group, the Complexity and Big Data Group. In addition, I have chaired the graduate educational program in public health and epidemiology at the University of Copenhagen, overseeing the scientific direction of the program, which includes 180 PhD students.
Societal impact
I always strive to ensure the relevance of my research to policymakers and the general public. One notable initiative I initiated was the citizen science research project titled ‘Standing together at a distance: How Danes are living with the Corona Crisis’. This project documented the real-time public health effects of the crisis in Denmark. The insights from the project were important in shaping public debates and government discussions surrounding the reopening of Denmark. Through my work, I have demonstrated a commitment to engaging in creative and inclusive research approaches, involving citizens in the process. This has included collaborations with key stakeholders such as Politiken (a Danish newspaper), DR (Danish Broadcasting Corporation), and Danica Pension. I also maintain a longstanding research partnership with the Capital Region of Denmark, focusing on stress intervention within workplaces. Furthermore, the SmartSleep project, which investigates the relationship between sleep patterns and young people’s use of digital media, exemplifies my ability to combine cutting-edge research with effective outreach and tangible impact on health policies.
Teaching, supervision and mentoring summaries
I am responsible for PhD-level courses in Causal Inference, Introduction to Complexity Science in Public Health and Quantitative Bias Analyses at the University of Copenhagen. I also give lectures in stress and sleep epidemiology. I am currently supervising one PhD students and I have supervised 19 PhD students, who have been awarded their PhD degree. I have been the main advisor for numerous bachelor and master students in at the University of Copenhagen. More than 10 postdoctoral researchers affiliated with my group over the years.
Grants, awards and honors
I have, in total, received 11.53 million EUR (equivalent to 86.5 mill DKK) in research funds as primary investigator. I was awarded the Elite Research Prize (EliteForsk-prisen) by the Ministry for Higher Education and Science to outstanding researchers in 2022, and I was awarded the ERC consolidator grant in 2023.
International relations
I believe in internationalization and diversity, and I have continued to broaden my scientific horizon through research stays at international leading institutions (INSERM Paris, UCL London, UCLA Los Angeles), international collaboration (e.g., Harvard, Sorbonne, Karolinska), and through international recruitment. In 2022, I had a 6-month sabbatical at the Institute of Advanced Studies, Amsterdam.
Current or recent membership of Editorial Boards and peer-review
My broad expertise in epidemiology is acknowledged internationally, and I have participated in numerous scientific boards and committees across Europe, including the Swedish Research Council, the Finnish Research Council, and the French Health Data Hub, and I have reviewed several research applications for the European Research Council.
Plenary lectures, keynote talks, and invited talks at international or national meetings
I have been honored with invitations to deliver keynote talks at various prestigious international meetings. Some notable examples of recent keynotes include the Swedish Register-based Research Summit in Stockholm, the Institute of Advanced Studies in Amsterdam, the European Academies of Science in Paris, the 9th Nordic Conference of Epidemiology and Register-based Health Research in Finland, and the Institute of Child Health at University College London.
Education
MS, PhD, DMSc
ID: 928500
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517
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High perceived stress and social interaction behaviour among young adults. A study based on objective measures of face-to-face and smartphone interactions
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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372
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Social Relations at Work and Incident Dementia: 29-Years' Follow-Up of the Copenhagen Male Study
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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310
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‘Standing together – at a distance’: Documenting changes in mental-health indicators in Denmark during the COVID-19 pandemic
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Published