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Southern Illinois University Carbondale

Sabrina H. B. Hardenbergh, Ph. D.
Adjunct Assistant Professor

Office
(M – F, 9:30 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.)
Community Health & Emergency Services, Inc.
Southern Illinois University
148 E. Pleasant Hill Road
1 Enterprise Place, Suite 107
Carbondale IL 62903-6160

Email
sabrina@midwest.net
shardenbergh@chesi.org

 

 
Research interests  

Nutritional/medical anthropology; human biology and adaptation; health/nutrition assessment; human growth and development; famine early warning systems; stress physiology; HIV/AIDS; political ecology; political economic policy and health; natural resource use, health and conservation in Madagascar; Africa; health and health service planning/assessment for medically underserved populations in rural Southern Illinois.




Current research proposals  

HIV dental & medical equipment, mammography outreach, mother & infant dental, nursing home dental, HIV dental, senior osteoporosis/diabetes/dental, pre-school dental, child exercise/nutrition, electronic medical records/mental health, electronic medical records/diabetes, diabetes self-care.




Selected publications

Hardenbergh SHB (1997) Why are boys so small?: child growth, diet and gender near Ranomafana, Madagascar. Social Science & Medicine 44(11): 1725-1738.

Hardenbergh SHB (1997) Results from an AIDS Service Program Review for Rural Southern Illinois and the Adjacent Region. Technical report at the Center for Rural Health & Social Service Development, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.

Hardenbergh SHB (1996) Mobile clinic mail survey results for health care providers and residents in Jackson, Franklin and Williamson counties of southern Illinois. In SIH Mobile Clinic Feasibility Study. Technical report by the Center for Rural Health & Social Service Development and the Small Business Development Center, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.

Hardenbergh SHB (1996) Behavioral quality and caloric intake in Malagasy children relative to international growth references. The American Journal of Human Biology 8(2):207-223.

Thomas RB, Paine SHB [aka SHB Hardenbergh], and Brenton BP (1989) Perspectives on socioeconomic causes of and responses to food deprivation. Food and Nutrition Bulletin 11:41-54.