Associate Professor of Epidemiology at National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece

Telephone: +30 210 746 2085
Email: esamoli(@)med.uoa.gr

Website: Evangelia Samoli


Biography

Evangelia (Evi) Samoli is an Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Medical Statistics at the Department of Hygiene, Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, at the Medical School of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece. She graduated from the School of Mathematics of the University of Athens and obtained an MSc in Social Statistics from the University of Southampton, UK. She received her doctoral degree from the Medical School of the University of Athens in 2005, while she has been trained in Epidemiology and Environmental Epidemiology.

She teaches Biostatistics and Epidemiology in graduate and post-graduate students at the Medical and Dentistry School, and at the Biology Department of the University of Athens, as well as in relevant seminars/ workshops, while she has organized Greek and international post-graduate courses on Biostatistics and Environmental Epidemiology. Her research interests focus on environmental epidemiology, biostatistics, and cancer epidemiology. She has published more than 127 peer-reviewed articles in international scientific journals with over 7500 citations (excluding self-citations) and has participated in more than 58 international conferences with various announcements and invited lectures.

She has acted as a reviewer of research projects and proposals, as well as for peer-reviewed articles in various international scientific journals. She has been a member in committees of the World Health Organization, the European Commission and the Health Effects Institute in the US on the health effects of air pollution. She has been a co-investigator or principal investigator for the University of Athens in various research projects funded by the European Commission or other Institutes (UK MRC, US HEI). She is a member of Greek and international scientific societies that are active in Environmental Epidemiology issues.

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