Loading
Sections

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Home

Contact Information

1066 Bondurant Hall
CB# 9535
Chapel Hill, NC
27599-9535

Phone: 919-962-6195
Fax: 919-966-0730

international@med.unc.edu
Skype: unc_med_international

 
You are here: Home > Events > Apply Now! Infectious Diseases and Public Health Research in Malawi

Apply Now! Infectious Diseases and Public Health Research in Malawi

— filed under:

What
  • Announcement
When 2009-10-15
from 03:40 PM to 03:40 PM
Where
Contact Name
Presenter
Sponsor
Add event to calendar vCal
iCal

Infectious Diseases and Public Health Research in Malawi

 

For the past 10 years, the UNC Institute for Global Health & Infectious Diseases and the Division of Infectious Diseases has sponsored two, first-year UNC medical students to conduct research at UNC Project in Lilongwe, Malawi for eight weeks during the summer.   If chosen,  UNC faculty will sponsor and assist in  applications for scholarships and grants, however students must procure their own funding.

 

Although students do not design or select their own projects, their areas of interest will be discussed and matched to existing projects and mentors in Malawi.  Previous students have worked on chart audits in clinical settings, including inpatient adult medicine, pediatrics, prevention of HIV mother to child transmission, HIV outpatient care. Additional research studies are listed on the UNC Project, Lilongwe, Malawi website. http://www.id.unc.edu/malawi

 

Eligibility:  ­First-year medical students who are available for eight weeks during the summer, 2010.  Student must procure their own funds.  Total costs between $4,500-$5,000.

 

Application Deadline:  Applications are due by November 1, 2009. Select students will be granted a series of interviews with final decisions made by November 15, 2009.

 

Application Requirements

  1. Current CV
  2. One-page description of why you want to conduct research in Malawi, including your short- and long-term goals

 

Electronic applications must be sent to both:

Megan Parker (parkerm@email.unc.edu) and Irving Hoffman (hoffmani@med.unc.edu).

 

For more information, contact other medical students who have previously worked in Malawi or Megan Parker (parkerm@email.unc.edu).