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Contributors

Oyin Aderibigbe

Heather Baer, ScD
Heather Baer is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health and the Channing Laboratory, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School. Her research has focused on the role of factors during childhood and adolescence—including diet, body fatness, and physical activity—in the development of breast cancer and benign breast disease later in life.

Hank Dart, MS
Hank Dart is a project manager at the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention. He received his bachelor's degree in Human Biology from Stanford University in 1989 and his master of science degree in Health and Social Behavior in 1995 from the Harvard School of Public Health. He has more than 15 years of experience in health education and communication, having worked for the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and Department of Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health before arriving at the Center in 1998.

Laurie Fisher, MS
Laurie Fisher is a research associate at the Channing Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

Morgan A. Ford, MS

Jennie Greene, MS

Daniel Kim, MD, MPH

Laura I. Mignone

Anne Mobley
Anne Mobley is an MS candidate in Epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health. Her primary research interest is HIV epidemiology and she currently works on the Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group's Late Outcomes Study (PACTG 219C), a prospective cohort study designed to examine the long-term effects of exposure in utero and/or postnatally to HIV and antiretroviral therapies.

Catherine Tomeo Ryan, MPH
Catherine Tomeo Ryan, MPH, is a freelance writer with nearly 10 years’ of experience in health communication and research. She received her master of public health degree in epidemiology from Boston University in 1997 and is a former project coordinator at the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention.

Michelle Samplin-Salgado, MPH
Michelle Samplin-Salgado is the Communications Manager at the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention. Michelle received her bachelor of health sciences degree from the University of Arizona and her master of public health degree from the University of Hawaii in 1995. Her work focuses on health communications and the use of new media to promote healthy lifestyles. Michelle has over 10 years of public health experience, having worked at the American Cancer Society, Peace Corps Ecuador, and Catholic Relief Services, prior to arriving at the Center in 2000.

Eva Schernhammer, MD, PhD

Cynthia Stein, MD, MPH

Angela Tokuda

Isa Williams, ScD

 

 


 
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