GIM Fellowship Training Opportunities

The Johns Hopkins GIM Fellowship is funded through federal training grants. These grants stipulate clinical research fellows spend a minimum of 80% of their time engaging in research activities. Assignment to a particular grant occurs after acceptance into the GIM fellowship. Below are available opportunities:

Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Sex Differences Related to Cardiometabolic Disease

This training program seeks highly motivated postdoctoral researchers with a background in obesity, metabolism, diabetes, sex hormones and/or cardiovascular disease to work on an Ancillary Study to the LookAHEAD trial. The study is focused on measuring sex hormones in people with diabetes and analyzing the association between the hormones and cardiometabolic outcomes in people with diabetes. This two-year position is sponsored by the National Institutes of Health – National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidneys Diseases.


Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Ethics and Regulatory Aspects of Pragmatic Clinical Trials

The Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics invites applications for a Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Ethics and Regulatory Aspects of Pragmatic Clinical Trials. This position includes pursuing independent research, working alongside faculty members involved with the ethics and regulatory aspects of large-scale pragmatic clinical trials and participating in the Hecht-Levi Postdoctoral Fellowship in Bioethics. Learn more and apply between October 17 and December 19, 2021.


Postdoctoral Fellowship in Ethics and Infectious Disease

The Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics and the Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities at the University of Oxford have established a Collaborative Bioethics Research and Training Program with support from the Wellcome Trust. Through this partnership, they have created joint post-doctoral training opportunities. They are pleased to invite applications from uniquely qualified individuals who are committed to interdisciplinary and transnational collaboration and who have a particular interest in the ethical issues at the intersection of global health and infectious disease. Learn more and apply between October 17 and December 19, 2021.