Kathleen Hanlon-Lundberg

projects

Faculty Profile

en4540@wayne.edu

Department

Anthropology

Public Health

Phone

734 223 9093

Selected publications

Hanlon-Lundberg, Kathleen M. "" To Me, It Was Natural": Naturalization of Technologically-Mediated Pregnancy and Birth Experience." PhD diss., Wayne State University, 2021.

Guinn, Debra A., M. Wendy Atkinson, Lisa Sullivan, MenJean Lee, Scott MacGregor, Barbara V. Parilla, Jill Davies et al. "Single vs weekly courses of antenatal corticosteroids for women at risk of preterm delivery: a randomized controlled trial." Jama 286, no. 13 (2001): 1581-1587.

Hanlon-Lundberg, Kathleen M., Russell S. Kirby, Sweeta Gandhi, and Fredrik F. Broekhuizen. "Nucleated red blood cells in cord blood of singleton term neonates." American journal of obstetrics and gynecology 176, no. 6 (1997): 1149-1156.

Hanlon-Lundberg, Kathleen M., Michelle Williams, Teresa Rhim, Robert F. Covert, Robert Mittendorf, and John A. Holt. "Accelerated fetal lung maturity profiles and maternal cocaine exposure." Obstetrics & Gynecology 87, no. 1 (1996): 128-132.

 

Other qualifications directly relevant to courses taught

American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Associate Member

Research Description

My dissertation research explores contemporary social models of pregnancy and childbirth with newly delivered persons, focusing on concepts of "nature" and "technology". 

I am currently involved in projects looking at the ways in which technology is naturalized into everyday concepts of health and well being. I also research human-animal interactions including issues of trust and social contracts, especially in multi-species sport.