Manoj Sharma

Professor, Department of Social and Behavioral Health
Adjunct Professor, Department of Internal Medicine at 's Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine
Expertise: Health behavior research, Stress-coping, Integrative health (mind-body interventions), Obesity prevention, Mental health

Biography

Manoj Sharma is a professor and past founding chair of the Department of Social and Behavioral Health at 's School of Public Health. His research interests are in developing evidence-based health promotion interventions, stress-coping, mental health, obesity prevention, integrative health, and community-based participatory research.

Sharma, a public health physician, is a master certified health education specialist with certification from the National Commission on Health Education Credentialing. In his career, spanning over 35 years, he has trained or taught over 6,000 health professionals at 13 national and international universities. 

He is also a prolific researcher who has published 16 books, over 425 peer-reviewed research articles, and more than 500 other publications. Sharma is ranked in the top one percentile of scientists globally from 176 subfields and in the top 400 in public health by the prominent academic journal Elsevier.

Sharma has received several prestigious honors. These include the American Public Health Association’s J. Mayhew Derryberry Award, which honors outstanding contributions to health education research theory and recognizes outstanding behavioral scientists, as well as the organization's Lyndon Haviland Mentoring Award and Integrative, Complementary and Traditional Health Practices Impact Award and Public Health Education and Health Promotion Distinguished Career Award. He is also the recipient of ’s Harry Reid Silver State Award, Outstanding Graduate Faculty Leadership Award, and Community Engagement Community-Based Research Faculty Award.

Education

  • MBBS, University of Delhi
  • Ph.D., Preventive Medicine (Public Health), The Ohio State University

Search For Other Experts On

health & medicine

Manoj Sharma In The News

Indica News
With the start of summer, there is abundant sunshine in most parts of the United States. This is the time to reaffirm an important behavior: sunscreen use. Skin cancer poses a significant public health problem in our country. Approximately 9,500 people in the US are diagnosed with skin cancer every day. The main types of skin cancer are basal cell carcinoma (BCC), squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), and melanoma. Melanoma is the least common but the deadliest, and it can spread more easily. While skin cancers are more common in Whites, they can affect any race or socioeconomic status.
India Currents
Dr. Manoj Sharma, a Professor of Social and Behavioral Health and Internal Medicine, answers queries about hoarding disorder.
K.N.P.R. News
May is Skin Safety Awareness Month. More than a decade ago, in 2014, the U.S. Surgeon General called skin cancer a public health crisis due to the alarming growth in cases. While Nevada ranks 33rd in the country for skin cancer, the American Cancer Society projects that more than a thousand Nevadans will be diagnosed with melanoma this year. So, is preventing it as simple as applying sunscreen? Or is that even simple?
Indica News
Spirulina (Arthrospira) platensis is a blue-green filamentous microalgae from the Cyanobacteria class that grows in fresh or salt water. It was consumed in ancient times by the Aztecs, but came to the limelight when NASA proposed that it could be grown by astronauts in space for food. It is a nutritious food and has been labeled as a “superfood.”

Articles Featuring Manoj Sharma

Spring flowers
Campus News | April 3, 2025

The students and faculty of are springing into headlines around the country.

Scarlet and Gray, “REB's Glitter Squad”, Lester Cruz and Isabel Ferguson, take pictures and hype up students and families during the October 2022 homecoming football game.
Campus News | November 8, 2022

A collection of news stories highlighting students and faculty who made headlines locally, regionally, and internationally.