Author information from the last article
Per Hjortdahl (f. 1946) er spesialist i samfunnsmedisin og professor i allmennmedisin. Han har deltatt i alle deler av arbeidet med artikkelen.
Forfatter har fylt ut ICMJE-skjemaet og oppgir ingen interessekonflikter.
Avdeling for allmennmedisin
Institutt for helse og samfunn
Universitetet i Oslo
Articles by Per Hjortdahl
Paperless migrants and Norwegian general practitioners
- Svein Aarseth,
- Trygve Kongshavn,
- Kjell Maartmann-Moe,
- Per Hjortdahl
07.06.2016:
It has been estimated that in 2006 there were 18 000 paperless migrants in Norway (1). Rejected asylum applications or expired tourist visas are common reasons why people remain illegally in Norway. A total of 1.9 – 3.8 million paperless migrants are assumed to live within the EU (2, 3). Like...
New guidelines for use of antibiotics in the primary health care service
- Morten Lindbæk,
- Siri Jensen,
- Knut Eirik Eliassen,
- Arne Fetveit,
- Nils Grude,
- Dag Berild,
- Per Hjortdahl
28.05.2013:
New national guidelines are now being issued for use of antibiotics in the primary health care service. We encourage all Norwegian doctors to follow them. The effort to promote an acceptable use of antibiotics and to prevent further development of resistance is increasingly being given priority on...
Knowledge, leadership and quality in the medical school curriculum
- Jan C. Frich,
- Sarah Frandsen Gran,
- Per Olav Vandvik,
- Pål Gulbrandsen,
- Per Hjortdahl
21.08.2012:
Knowledge management, leadership and quality improvement – abbreviated «KLoK» – was introduced as a separate subject in the medical school curriculum at the University of Oslo in 2011. This subject will provide the students with the skills to exercise their medical vocation professionally, as...
General practitioners’ view on hormone replacement therapy during and after menopause
- Bjørn Gjelsvik,
- Elisabeth Swensen,
- Per Hjortdahl
31.05.2007:
In recent years the knowledge base for hormone therapy (HT)– treatment of menopausal and post-menopausal women with oestrogen or a combination of oestrogen and gestagen – has improved substantially. It used to be assumed that oestrogen had a beneficial effect on the risk of cardiovascular disease...