Are you passionate about understanding how early-life chemical exposures affect child development?
We are offering a 3-year postdoctoral position for a motivated researcher to lead investigations into translational environmental health research on plastic-associated chemicals, endocrine disruption, and neurodevelopmental traits in children and youth. This position emphasizes domain expertise in neurodevelopment, toxicology, epidemiology, and interdisciplinary health research, and is ideal for candidates with a background in neuroscience, psychology, toxicology, epidemiology, or medicine.
The position is part of the MoBa-PlastChem project, funded by the Minderoo Foundation (Australia), and seeks to investigate plastic-associated chemical exposures and endocrine disruption during foetal life and the impact on neurodevelopmental and reproductive health outcomes in children and youth.
The position is located at NIPH’s Department of Child Health and Development in the Division of Public Health and Prevention. The department consists of about 20 employees, working with research projects covering a broad range of topics related to risk- and protective factors for child health and development. The department coordinates the work within NIPH’s strategic developmental plan for mental health and prevention in children and youth and has extensive collaborations with other NIPH departments and national and international researchers.
About the project. The researcher will be affiliated with the project “Prenatal exposure to plastic chemicals and health outcomes in children and adolescents from the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study (MoBa-PlastChem)”. The objective of MoBa-PlastChem is to investigate whether prenatal exposure to environmental toxicants, originating from plastic production or products, is linked to endocrine disruption and later reproductive health problems or neurodevelopmental traits/diagnoses in children and adolescents. The project uses data and biospecimen from MoBa, as well as linkage to national health registries. This study will employ novel methods for causal inference using genetically informed approaches, alongside advanced machine learning techniques for data modelling and analysis.
The candidate will analyse project data and have a leading role in the development of scientific publications, collaborating closely with team members. The candidate’s research will primarily focus on neurodevelopmental traits and diagnoses linked to prenatal exposures to plastic chemicals and their mixtures, including sex-specific differences and the mediation by sex steroid hormones. Utilizing both conventional methods and innovative approaches, the work aims to strengthen causal inference.
The research team consists of researchers within multiple disciplines, such as toxicology, endocrinology, analytical chemistry, epidemiology/genetic epidemiology, pediatrics, psychology, and statistics. The project groups at NIPH also collaborates with research groups in USA, UK and Australia. The candidate will work together with researchers from its own and other departments at NIPH, including The PsychGen Centre for Genetic Epidemiology and Mental Health, in addition to national and international partners.
The Norwegian Institute of Public Health is a unique workplace with a strong sense of social responsibility and an important role in promoting the health and well-being of the population. We are committed to building strong professional communities and emphasize the development of each individual employee, as well as their ability to influence their own workday. Here, you will work alongside dedicated and highly competent colleagues in a supportive and friendly environment.
The Norwegian Institute of Public Health’s vision is better health for all. We produce, summarize and communicate knowledge for the public health sector and healthcare services. Our main activities are emergency preparedness, knowledge and infrastructure. Infrastructure comprises registries, health surveys, biobanks and laboratory services. The Institute is a government organization under the Ministry of Health. We have approximately 1300 employees located in Oslo and Bergen.
The Institute is committed to diversity. We urge qualified candidates to apply for a job with us, regardless gender, age, disability, ethnic or national background, or if there are periods of absence from work.