John Brandt Brodersen

John Brandt Brodersen

Professor

Primary fields of research

John Brodersen is general practitioner with over ten years experience in clinical practice. Dr Brodersen has a PhD in public health and psychometrics and works as an associate research professor in the area of medical screening at University of Copenhagen, Department of Public Health, Research Unit and Section of General Practice.

His research is focused on the field of development and validation of questionnaires to measure psychosocial consequences of false-positive screening results. He has employed qualitative and quantitative methods e.g. developed patient reported outcomes measures qualitatively and validated those using Rasch models to objectify subjective areas like psychosocial consequences. Dr Brodersen has published widely in peer reviewed journals.

In relation to the area of self testing and screening Dr. Brodersen expertise lies in areas of sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, overdiagnosis, informed consent and what the psychosocial consequences are for healthy people when they are tested. He also teaches nationally and internationally in evidence-based medicine.

Ph.d.-thesis:
Brodersen, J 2006 , Measuring psychosocial consequences of false-positive screening results - breast cancer as an example, PhD thesis, Månedsskrift for Praktisk Lægegerning, Department of General Practice, Institute of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen. Copenhagen.

Selected publications

  1. Published

    Measuring psychosocial consequences of false-positive screening results - breast cancer as an example

    Brodersen, John Brandt, 2006, Department of General Practice, Institute of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen. Copenhagen: Maanedsskrift for Praktisk Laegegerning. 155 p.

    Research output: Book/ReportPh.D. thesis

ID: 984684