Agnes Wold, born January 7, 1955, is a professor of clinical bacteriology specializing in the normal flora of the body, at the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.[1] She is a nationally known commentator on television, radio and in newspapers on issues related to infectious disease and women in science.[2]
Agnes Wold | |
---|---|
Born | January 7, 1955 | (age 69)
Nationality | Swedish |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Microbiology |
Institutions | University of Gothenburg |
Wold completed her medical degree in 1989 at the University of Gothenburg.[3] Wold specializes in the normal bacterial flora of the intestines, and their interaction with the immune system. Together with her group of scientists she focuses studies on how allergies and inflammatory bowel disease may be dependent on an altered gut-flora.[1] She has studied allergy development in children of farmers for many years and suggested their low rates of allergy may be explained by the hygiene hypothesis of allergy development.[4]
In January 2014, media called attention to Wold's development of a promising general vaccine against allergies, consisting of a bacterial protein working as an antigen stimulating the immune system.[5]
In 1997, Wold, together with Christine Wennerås, published 'Nepotism and Sexism in Peer-Review' in Nature[6] which examined discrimination in peer-reviews of postdoctoral research awards at the Swedish Medical Research Council. The report scientifically showed that women needed significantly better academic credentials than men in order to succeed in applications for services and research grants. Wold was previously chairperson of the Kvinnliga akademikers förening [sv] (Association of Women Academics).
Wold is a regular contributor to Swedish newspapers, Twitter, television and radio shows especially regarding infectious disease, allergy and women in science.[7][8] During the COVID-19 pandemic, she has become a regular source of practical advice for the general public.[8]
Wold is a daughter of statistician Herman Wold and mathematician Anna-Lisa Arrhenius-Wold, and a granddaughter of Svante Arrhenius, a winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.[4] She has three children.[4]
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