Tomorrow's Doctors - AAMC  
  Home  MCAT®   AMCAS®   ERAS®   NRMP   Financing Your Medical Education   Minorities in Medicine   Publications Shopping Cart   Site Map    

Overseas Fellowship
Award Program Home

Request for Applications

Students' Frequently Asked Questions

Advisors and
Faculty FAQs

Families' FAQs

Annual Program Selection Conference

Online Resources

NIH/Fogarty International Clinical Research Scholars Program

 

Vanderbilt University

John E. Fogarty International Center

Association of Schools of Public Health

Fellowship Sites

New Site Solicitation

The Fogarty International Center seeks qualified institutions to serve as hosts to scholars and/or fellows. Learn more >>

Overseas Fellowships in Global Health and Clinical Research

Would you like a unique chance to experience clinical research** training in a developing country? Would you like to work with a strong team of mentors and colleagues on important problems that advance people's health?

The National Institutes of Health's (NIH) Fogarty International Center (FIC), in partnership with the NIH National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the NIH National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, the NIH National Institute of Nursing Research, the NIH National Cancer Institute, the NIH National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the NIH National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities and the NIH National Institute on Drug Abuse, is offering a one-year clinical research training experience for graduate-level U.S. students in the health professions. This is an opportunity for highly motivated individuals to experience mentored research training at top-ranked NIH-funded research centers in developing countries. Africa, Asia, and the Americas are regions of the world that, if accepted, you may find yourself experiencing.

The NIH/FICRS program is designed primarily for students meeting all of the following qualifications:

  • A strong interest in, and potential for, a career in international health activities and/or clinical research.

  • Advanced standing in a U.S. medical (M3) or osteopathic school; or enrollment in a doctoral-level program at a U.S. school of public health, optometry, veterinary medicine, pharmacy, nursing or dentistry. Applicants must have strong academic records and must be U.S. citizens or permanent U.S. residents. Medical and osteopathic students must have completed their basic science courses and one year of clinical clerkship; Ph.D. students must have completed their coursework and passed their qualifying exams prior to the beginning of the fellowship.

  • Support of their home academic institution, including a committed mentor.

Each Fellowship will be for a one year period. The term will begin with an intensive orientation program on the NIH campus in Bethesda, Md., in July. This will be followed by approximately 10+ months of intense research training at the foreign site.

Congratulations to the 2007 FICRS Award Recipients (PDF, 3 pages)

Congratulations to the 2006 FICRS Award Recipients

Congratulations to the 2005 FICRS Award Recipients

Congratulations to the 2004 FICRS Award Recipients

To view historical information about the program and Scholar biographies, download the 2004-2008 Scholars Book. (PDF, 71 pages)

To learn about the Fogarty International Clinical Research Fellows (FICRF) program and read blogs written by our Scholars, please visit www.fogartyscholars.org.


* This program is administered by the Association of American Medical Colleges, Vanderbilt University, Meharry Medical College, and the Association of Schools of Public Health.

**The term "clinical research" means patient oriented clinical research conducted with human subjects, or research on the causes and consequences of disease in human populations involving material of human origin (such as tissue specimens and cognitive phenomena) for which an investigator or colleague directly interacts with human subjects in an outpatient or inpatient setting to clarify a problem in human physiology, pathophysiology or disease, or epidemiologic or behavioral studies, outcomes research or health services research, or developing new technologies, therapeutic interventions, or clinical trials.

 

Contact Us    © 1995-2008 AAMC    Terms and Conditions    Privacy Statement