Author information from the last article
E-mail: andrea.winkler@medisin.uio.no
Andrea Sylvia Winkler (born 1966), MD, PhD, Professor at the Department of Community Medicine and Global Health, Director of the Centre for Global Health, University of Oslo, Specialist Neurologist and Senior Researcher at the Center for Global Health, Department of Neurology, Technical University of Munich.
Articles by Andrea Sylvia Winkler
Neglected tropical diseases – the present and the future
- Andrea Sylvia Winkler,
- Katharina Klohe,
- Veronika Schmidt,
- Ingeborg Haavardsson,
- Annette Abraham,
- Ulrich Fabien Prodjinotho,
- Bernard Ngowi,
- Chummy Sikasunge,
- Emilia Noormahomed,
- John Amuasi,
- Joyce Kaducu,
- Helena Ngowi,
- Bernadette Abele-Ridder,
- Wendy Elizabeth Harrison,
- Clarissa Prazeres da Costa
02.01.2018:
Neglected tropical diseases are a diverse group of diseases that predominantly but not exclusively affect people in tropical and subtropical climatic zones. The collaboration between the WHO, non-governmental organisations, local stakeholders and pharmaceutical companies, among others, is key to...
Migrant health is global health
- Bernadette Kumar,
- Harald Siem,
- Ingeborg Haavardsson,
- Andrea Sylvia Winkler
20.12.2017:
The number of migrants worldwide is at a record high level. An investment in migrant health is an investment in the future: migrants should be seen as a resource rather than a burden. The ‘Migration Period’ of the Middle Ages (300–700 AD) resulted in dramatic changes in the architecture of...
Nutrition – A global challenge for health
- Katharina Klohe,
- Clarissa Prazeres da Costa,
- Nanna Lien,
- Gerd Holmboe-Ottesen,
- Michael Rychlik,
- Ingeborg Haavardsson,
- Gunhild Stordalen,
- Sudhvir Singh,
- Ingunn Engebretsen,
- Per Ole Iversen,
- Andrea Sylvia Winkler
12.12.2017:
Malnutrition represents a serious global burden with around 800 million people being undernourished and over 2 billion people being overweight or obese. The associated medical, developmental, social and economic consequences are serious, lasting and extremely costly for the affected families...