- Assistant Professor, Global Health
- Adjunct Assistant Professor, Epidemiology

Hans Rosling Center 887
3980 15th Ave.
Box 351620
Seattle, WA 98195
United States
Select from the following:
Dr. Monisha Sharma is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Global Health. She received her Masters in infectious disease epidemiology from Johns Hopkins University and her PhD in epidemiology from the University of Washington. Her research interests include mathematical modeling and cost-effectiveness analyses of HIV and cervical cancer prevention. She is the principal investigator of a K01 award to design an intervention into increase men’s uptake of HIV self-testing and clinic linkage in Uganda using a discrete choice experiment. She is also leading a Gates-funded project to model the health and economic impact of community-based pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) delivery using HIV self-testing in Kenya. She teaches GH542, Introduction to Economic Evaluation for Global Health as well as the online Economic Evaluation for Global Health course providing training to >200 researchers globally, primarily from sub-Saharan Africa.
- PhD, University of Washington
- MSPH, Johns Hopkins University
- BS, Tufts University
- Cervical Cancer
- Cost-Effectiveness
- COVID-19
- Epidemiology
- Health Economics
- HIV/AIDS
- HPV
- Mobile WACh Empower: Mobile Solutions to Empower Reproductive Life Planning for Women Living With HIV
- Cluster RCT of the Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach to improve integration of HIV prevention and treatment services in family planning clinics at Ministry of Health program scale in Kenya
- Designing a combination intervention strategy using point-of-care viral load testing to improve pediatric viral suppression in Kenya
- Designing an Intervention to Increase Men's Linkage to Care and Prevention after HIV Self-Testing in Uganda
- Evaluate and optimize a virtual care model for PrEP delivery
- Modeling the public health impact of using HIV self testign for PrEP delivery in sub Saharan Africa
- Simplifying HIV Treatment and Monitoring (STREAM2): Point-of-Care Urine Tenofovir Adherence and Viral Load Testing to Improve HIV Outcomes in South Africa
- Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach to Optimize the Task-Shared Mental Health Treatment Cascade (SAIA-MH): A Cluster Randomized Trial
Sharma M, Barnabas RV, Celum C. Community-based strategies to strengthen men’s engagement in the HIV care cascade in sub-Saharan Africa. PLoS Med. 2017 Apr 11;14(4):e1002262. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002262. PMID: 28399122
Sharma M, Smith JA, Farquhar C, Ying R, Cherutich P, Wamuti B, Bukusi D, Golden M, Barnabas RV. Assisted partner services is cost-effective for decreasing HIV burden in western Kenya: A mathematical modeling analysis. AIDS. 2018 Jan 14;32(2):233-241 PMCID: PMC5736414
Sharma M, Ying, R, Tarr, G, and Barnabas, R. Systematic review and meta-analysis of community and facility-based HIV testing to address linkage to care gaps in sub-Saharan Africa. Nature. 2015; 528: S77-S85. PMCID: PMC4778960
Sharma M, Creutzfeldt CJ, Lewis A, Patel, PV, Hartog C, Jannotta GE, Blissitt P, Kross EK, Kassebaum N, Greer DM, Curtis JR, Wahlster S. Healthcare professionals’ perceptions of critical care resource availability and factors associated with mental well-being during COVID-19: Results from a US survey. Clin Infect Dis. 2020 Sep 2;ciaa1311. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciaa1311
Sharma M, Kim JJ, Seoud M. Cost-effectiveness of increasing cervical cancer screening coverage and efficiency in Lebanon. Vaccine. 2017 Jan 23;35(4):564-569. PMID: 28017434. DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2016.12.015