Finn Brudevold


Finn Brudevold was a Norwegian-American odontologist and educator. He was most known for his research on the application of fluorine for teeth protection.

Biography

Finn Brudevold was born at Gjøvik in Oppland, Norway. He was the son of Peder Amalius Brudevold and Ingrid Haugom Brudevold. Brudevold was educated at the Norwegian Dental School. After his dental examination in Oslo in 1932, he began working as a dentist in private practice. He continue his education at the University of Minnesota School of Dentistry and took his dental exam in 1940. Brudevold received a Carnegie Fellowship at Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Rochester in 1941.
Brudevold started his academic career as an instructor at Tufts College Dental School in 1945, where he first was an instructor and then assistant professor until 1949. He later served as professor at the Harvard University School of Dental Medicine. Brudevold was chief of preventive dentistry at the department of inorganic chemistry at The Forsyth Institute from 1968 until he retired in 1986. Dr. Brudevold published a total of more than 200 scientific works. He was the recipient of numerous awards and served as president of the International Association of Dental Research.

Selected works