Academic Credentials
  • M.S., Environmental Health Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, 2020
  • B.A., Chemistry, Pepperdine University, 2018
  • B.S., Biology, Pepperdine University, 2018
Additional Education & Training
  • Managing the COVID-19 Pandemic, UC Berkeley, 2020
  • Contact Tracing for COVID-19, Johns Hopkins University, 2020
Professional Affiliations
  • American Industrial Hygiene Association, 2020-2023
  • • Toxicology Subcommittee
  • • Women in IH Subcommittee
  • • Stewardship and Sustainability Subcommittee
  • Genetic and Environmental Toxicology Association of Northern California, 2021-2023
  • • Business Representative
  • Society of Toxicology (Associate Member), 2021-present
Languages
  • Mandarin Chinese

Ms. Dahlberg is an environmental health scientist who specializes in pharmacovigilance and safety, health risk assessment, practical toxicology, and regulatory science.

Ms. Dahlberg has extensive experience with leading and conducting systematic literature reviews and meta-analyses across a variety of disciplines, providing technical litigation support in the realm of exposure science and pharmacoepidemiology, evaluating and assessing biases in epidemiologic studies, and quantitative exposure science.

Ms. Dahlberg's experience includes assessing feasibility of post-marketing studies, pharmacovigilance consulting, assessing human health risk from exposure to a variety of chemical agents, such as volatile and semi-volatile organic compounds (e.g., benzene, methacrylates, toluene), metals / metalloids (e.g., lead, arsenic, cadmium, nickel), perflourinated compounds (e.g., perfluorooctanoic acid or PFOS), silicates (e.g., asbestos, crystalline silica), and BPA. 

Prior to joining Exponent, Ms. Dahlberg received her M.S. in environmental health sciences with a concentration in toxicology from UC Berkeley School of Public Health. Additionally, she brings a strong foundation in the core sciences. She received her B.S. in biology and B.A. in chemistry from Pepperdine University, where she was heavily involved in laboratory research in the fields of microbiology and physical chemistry.