Global Health Research Internship 2016 in Boston



Similar documents
BOSTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH COMPETENCIES

MEDICINE, DOCTOR OF (M.D.)/ PUBLIC HEALTH, MASTER OF (M.P.H.) [COMBINED]

Richard H. Needle, PhD, MPH Lin Zhao, PhD candidate (UCSF School of Nursing) CSIS Africa Program Roundtable June 10, 2010

Course Description. SEMESTER I Fundamental Concepts of Substance Abuse MODULE OBJECTIVES

HARM REDUCTION FOR PEOPLE WHO INJECT DRUGS INFORMATION NOTE

Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education

Graduate Courses in Public Health

Designing Clinical Addiction Research

School of Public Health and Health Services Department of Prevention and Community Health

MASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH DEGREE PROGRAM

Thesis: Neighborhood Poverty & Gender Inequality: The Context of Individual Sexual Risk Behaviors for Sexually Transmitted Infections

Department of Prevention and Community Health

Dimensions of Global Health

Global Update on HIV Treatment 2013: Results, Impact and Opportunities

Pharmacoeconomic, Epidemiology, and Pharmaceutical Policy and Outcomes Research (PEPPOR) Graduate Program

What Is Patient Safety?

The Primary Care Population Medicine Program: A Combined MD-ScM Program

Apply an ecological framework to assess and promote population health.

Curriculum - Doctor of Philosophy

BF in International Finance SWISS QUALITY EDUCATION, INTERNATIONAL NETWORK AND PERSONALIZED MENTORING.

Dublin Declaration. on Partnership to fight HIV/AIDS in Europe and Central Asia

Challenges & opportunities

CALL FOR PAPERS JOHANNESBURG SOUTH AFRICA, NOV. 30 DEC 4, 2015 DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND IN AFRICA: PROSPECTS, OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES

Dual elimination of mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HIV and syphilis

Interprofessional: unique interprofessional competencies in epidemiology, policy, management, and leadership with local and global applications

Midwifery. Papua New Guinea Specialist Nursing Competency Standards. Introduction. 1st Edition, September Papua New Guinea Nursing Council

Health in the post-2015 Development Framework: How to meet the needs of the most marginalized and excluded

School of Public Health and Health Services. Doctor of Public Health Health Behavior Department of Prevention and Community Health.

Viral hepatitis. Report by the Secretariat

The Basics of Drug Resistance:

FIGHTING AGAINST MATERNAL AND NEONATAL MORTALITY IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

MPH Epidemiology Practicum Guidelines 2014

SIXTY-SEVENTH WORLD HEALTH ASSEMBLY. Agenda item May Hepatitis

College of Public Health

Technical guidance note for Global Fund HIV proposals in Round 11

TRACKS INFECTIOUS DISEASE EPIDEMIOLOGY

Case Finding for Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C

University of Maryland School of Medicine Master of Public Health Program. Evaluation of Public Health Competencies

Post-2015 Negotiation Briefs #8: Youth Friendly Services in Universal Health Coverage

Statement by Dr. Sugiri Syarief, MPA

cambodia Maternal, Newborn AND Child Health and Nutrition

Master of Arts (MA) in Health Education

Chapter 21. What Are HIV and AIDS?

Master of Public Health (MPH) SC 542

Glossary Monitoring and Evaluation Terms

244CW Master of Public Health

How To Get A Phd At The University Of Sydney

Aids Fonds funding for programmes to prevent HIV drug resistance

Epidemiology. Admission Guidelines for MPH DEGREES OFFERED: MPH IN EPIDEMIOLOGY PH.D. IN EPIDEMIOLOGY FACULTY INTERIM CHAIR PROFESSORS

Master of Arts, Counseling Psychology Course Descriptions

COLORADO PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE COMPETENCY SETS User Guide

Graduate Student Epidemiology Program

Epidemiology 521. Epidemiology of Maternal and Child Health Problems. Winter / Spring, 2010

HIV/AIDS: General Information & Testing in the Emergency Department

Guidance Note on Developing Terms of Reference (ToR) for Evaluations

Master s Entry into Nursing. Academic Manual

Course offerings and Descriptions CED Counseling and Educational Development Courses

NICHD s Pediatric, Adolescent, & Maternal AIDS Branch


Department of Global Health Global Health Communication MPH. Program Guide Program Directors:

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics

Program in Public Health Course Descriptions

Health, history and hard choices: Funding dilemmas in a fast-changing world

NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF RWANDA HIV/AIDS CONTROL POLICY

Riley College of Education and Leadership Ed.D. Administrator Leadership Student Performance on Program Major Assessments

Ph.D. Counselor Education and Supervision Program Guidebook

Course Curriculum for Master Degree in Nursing/ Maternal and Newborn Nursing

UMEÅ INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL

School of Public Health and Health Services Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics

HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care

How To Teach Health Care To A Health Care Worker

South African Nursing Council (Under the provisions of the Nursing Act, 2005)

General RID Curriculum

Nursing (NURS) Nursing Research and Evidence-Based Practice Nursing Research

Rebecca R. Cheezum, PhD, MPH Curriculum Vitae

Armstrong Institute Patient Safety and Quality Leadership Academy

The implementation of PHC re-engineering in South Africa

Kenya National Bureau of Statistics, 2010 population census 2009 report.

How Universal is Access to Reproductive Health?

INDICATOR REGION WORLD

Department/Academic Unit: Public Health Sciences Degree Program: Biostatistics Collaborative Program

Metropolitan State University of Denver Master of Social Work Program Field Evaluation

The Vienna PhD School of Informatics Design, Implementation and Experiences

Boston University School of Public Health Position Description: Dean of the School of Public Health

Health for learning: the Care for Child Development package

Masters of Science in Clinical Research (MSCR) Curriculum. Goal/Objective of the MSCR

UNAIDS 2013 AIDS by the numbers

Transcription:

801 Massachusetts Ave, Crosstown 2079 Boston, MA 02118-2335 Tel: 617-414-6933 E-mail: Karsten.Lunze@post.harvard.edu Karsten Lunze, MD, MPH, DrPH, FACPM, FAAP Research Assistant Professor of Medicine Global Health Research Internship 2016 in Boston This learner-centered internship is based at Boston University. It provides educational components and intensive practical research activities to students interested in advancing their research skills in global health. Geared towards interested public health and medical students, it also offers exposure to clinical settings and public health practice sites at Boston University and other institutions in the Boston area. Goals/ Objectives: Dates: 1) To develop advanced students global health research skills through contributions to a current project involving existing data 2) To develop a targeted research question and a specific analytic plan 3) To produce a research deliverable meriting coauthorship on a peer-reviewed publication or, depending on the intern s contributions, draft a publishable paper 12 weeks in summer 2015; the dates are flexible You will join a cohort of research interns at Boston University (BU) and be paired in teams. You will be supervised and mentored by the project principle investigator, Karsten Lunze. At the beginning of your internship, in coordination with your mentor at your home institution, we will agree with you on your individual learning plan and target it to your learning needs. 1) Research skills development You will be offered an intensive, individual multiple session curriculum on research concepts, methods and tools, including regular assignments related to your chosen topic. You will undergo and receive certification in the ethical conduct of research. Together with other master and doctoral students, staff and faculty, you will participate in regular didactic seminars and meetings. You will critically appraise your peers work in progress meetings and journal peer reviews. You will develop your management and leadership skills by taking on a challenge related to your research and developing an action plan to address it. Depending on your topic, arrangements will be made to connect you to relevant stakeholders and collaborators at other universities in the Boston area, such as Harvard, MIT, Tufts, or Brandeis.

801 Massachusetts Ave, Crosstown 2079 Boston, MA 02118-2335 Tel: 617-414-6933 E-mail: Karsten.Lunze@post.harvard.edu Karsten Lunze, MD, MPH, DrPH, FACPM, FAAP Research Assistant Professor of Medicine Global Health Research Internship 2016 in Boston This learner-centered internship is based at Boston University. It provides educational components and intensive practical research activities to students interested in advancing their research skills in global health. Geared towards interested public health and medical students, it also offers exposure to clinical settings and public health practice sites at Boston University and other institutions in the Boston area. Goals/ Objectives: Dates: 1) To develop advanced students global health research skills through contributions to a current project involving existing data 2) To develop a targeted research question and a specific analytic plan 3) To produce a research deliverable meriting coauthorship on a peer-reviewed publication or, depending on the intern s contributions, draft a publishable paper 12 weeks in summer 2015; the dates are flexible. You will join a cohort of research interns at Boston University (BU) and be paired in teams. You will be supervised and mentored by the project principle investigator, Karsten Lunze. At the beginning of your internship, in coordination with your mentor at your home institution, we will agree with you on your individual learning plan and target it to your learning needs. 1) Research skills development You will be offered an intensive, individual multiple session curriculum on research concepts, methods and tools, including regular assignments related to your chosen topic. You will undergo and receive certification in the ethical conduct of research. Together with other master and doctoral students, staff and faculty, you will participate in regular didactic seminars and meetings. You will critically appraise your peers work in progress meetings and journal peer reviews. You will develop your management and leadership skills by taking on a challenge related to your research and developing an action plan to address it. Depending on your topic, arrangements might made to connect you to relevant stakeholders and collaborators at other universities in the Boston area, such as Harvard, MIT, Tufts, or Brandeis.

2) Research Project: Maternal and newborn health in Zambia Even with recent global progress towards Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 for 2015, an estimated 287,000 women die during pregnancy and childbirth every year. Nearly 3 million newborns die during their first month of life. Improvements have been uneven and inadequate. Existing disparities are stark and reflect persistent barriers and bottlenecks to scale-up quality health care for women and newborns in low-resource contexts. Proven interventions that reduce maternal and newborn mortality and morbidity are well established, yet these essential interventions are not delivered at scale in low- and middle income countries (LMIC). To increase availability and coverage of these essential interventions, countries must overcome challenges of demand, supply, quality of health care, and the enabling environment. As part of post-2015 planning, efforts at national and global levels continue to take stock of achievements and lessons from the MDGs and looking for implementation strategies to further reduce preventable maternal and newborn deaths and disability. In Zambia, similar to many resource-limited countries, there has been some progress in reducing mortality of children under 5 years of age and infants under one year, but less to increase neonatal survival. Most neonatal deaths occur early, during the first and second day of life, and many are preventable. At the same time, newborn care practices in sub-saharan Africa at the community level are poorly understood. A better understanding appreciation of environmental and local behavioral factors, and traditional practices that place neonates (and mothers) at risk in resource-limited settings in sub- Saharan Africa might improve the design and implementation of appropriate interventions to prevent maternal and newborn deaths in the communities. Your responsibility will be to conduct a secondary data analysis or a newborn (maternal) healthrelated meta-synthesis of existing data. In general, your research will explore and understand practices and attitudes as well as perceived barriers and potential facilitators of preventing and managing maternal and newborn health problems among communities in rural Zambia or similar settings with limited access to health care and a poor infrastructure. You will use existing data from facility-based surveys as well as focus group discussions (FGD) and in-depth interviews (IDI). Specifically, your research project will analyze current newborn (or maternal) health related practices and identify potential strategies to improve newborn (or maternal) care and health outcomes. Past interns have worked on newborn care seeking in Lufwanyama and on the use of point of care testing for malaria in Southern Province. Part of the internship s orientation week will be a discussion between you and your internship mentor, reviewing available datasets and the current research agenda to determine and formulate your research topic. We will then identify and develop a feasible research question with you at the beginning of your internship. You will receive an office, computer, and dedicated software for the duration of your internship to conduct your research project. We use NVivo and SAS and will train you in these programs. You may choose to work with software you are familiar with, should you bring relevant experience.

3) Clinical and Public Health Practice Component: With consent from the internship mentor, qualified students who progress on their research project may be offered to participate in practical public health and research-related clinical activities. This includes placement with the Boston Public Health Commission, the Massachusetts State Department of Public Health, harm reduction programs or screening, brief intervention and counseling activities (SBIRT) or office based opioid treatment (OBOT) programs at (BMC). Medical students may be offered to participate in primary care clinics at BMC or in public health clinics maintained by the Boston Public Health Commission. Responsibilities and expectations: Results-driven, intensive 12 week internship First two weeks includes: orientation, certification in ethical conduct of research, research methods and skills curriculum, networking activities Subsequent weeks include active and productive conduct of research activities, regular review and revision of deliverables, active participation in longitudinal educational components, ongoing networking Note that this is a competitive internship posting: - Experience in research and in drafting abstracts papers would be preferred, but is not required. - Experience in the subject area through academic work or research would be an advantage, but is not required. - Interns must have sufficient working knowledge of English (expert reading and writing, advanced speaking) and must have German writing skills commensurate with their background. Financial support is available through the DAAD RISE program (travel costs and full stipend). Please apply by 15 Dec 2015 directly at https://www.daad.de/app-rise-ww/rise-ww/index/login In your application, please indicate why you are interested in this research area. Please also include a statement of motivation (what are your career plans and professional goals related to this internship, and how does this rotation relate to them), learning goals for this rotation (what are you trying to achieve during and after this rotation), as well as a CV and letter of recommendation from a faculty member or instructor who is familiar with you and can attest to your capabilities. To demonstrate your capabilities in academic English, please also compose and submit a 1 page essay on a major challenge for maternal or newborn health. In your essay, briefly comment on how your research might address your chosen challenge in today s global health context.

2) Research Project: HIV prevention among key populations in Russia and Malaysia The HIV/AIDS epidemic in Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia is concentrated in vulnerable groups who are at high risk for HIV infection. Key populations such as people who inject drugs (PWID) experience most of the HIV burden. Among PWID, HIV transmission occurs through unsafe injections, and increasingly through unsafe heterosexual vaginal intercourse among HIVinfected drug users and their non-infected sex partners. Thus, concentrated HIV epidemics carry the inherent potential risk of viral spread from most at-risk populations through their sexual partners, the so-called bridge populations, to the general population, where it subsequently can transition into a generalized epidemic. Without addressing the needs of key populations, a sustainable response to HIV cannot be achieved. With growing evidence on the role of genetic, environmental and social determinants on health and risk behavior, HIV transmission is increasingly understood as not limited to the result of decisions and behavior at the individual level. Environments generate or produce risks and are as important determinants of HIV transmission as are individual behaviors. The risk of HIV transmission is thus influenced by the interactions of individual, biological and environmental factors. Your research will focus on the environmental risks of key populations such as PWID. Approaches seeking to understand the dynamic and complex relationships of individualenvironment interactions in the production and reduction of risk (social epidemiology) include quantitative methods as well as qualitative methods to map how social, political, and cultural conditions generate and reinforce vulnerability to HIV, particularly among socially marginalized populations such as PWID. You will use the concept of risk environment as analytic framework in order to advance our understanding of how risk and response relate to the situation and the structure of the environment in which they occur, and in order to inform intervention strategies that can contribute to HIV prevention among drug users in various global settings. Risk environment is defined as the space, either social or physical, in which a variety of environmental factors interact and determine the chances of risk occurring. The risk environment is conceptualized as environments of several types (physical, social, economic, legal, policy, etc.) which interact at various levels (micro, meso, and macro). Bringing about changes in these various types and at various level of environment to influence HIV risk and prevent HIV is an approach termed enabling environment or structural HIV prevention. Using existing data from our current studies (quantitative datasets from surveys and qualitative data from anthropologic research) conducted in Russia and Malaysia, options for your project include, but are not limited to: - Policy analysis of risk environment and key populations health analyzing qualitative data from various sites in Russia - Analysis of survey data from clinical HIV prevention trials in St. Petersburg, Russia to identify the role of certain risk factors (such as stigmatization) on adverse health outcomes or health care access among HIV infected PWID - Analysis of data from three sites in Malaysia to determine the risk environment of PWID Alternatively, you may identify and develop another feasible research topic and question in discussion with the internship mentor at the beginning of your rotation.

3) Clinical and Public Health Practice Component: With consent from the internship mentor, qualified students who progress on their research project may be offered to participate in practical public health and research-related clinical activities. This includes placement with the Boston Public Health Commission, the Massachusetts State Department of Public Health, harm reduction programs or screening, brief intervention and counseling activities (SBIRT) or office based opioid treatment (OBOT) programs at (BMC). Medical students may be offered to participate in primary care clinics at BMC or in public health clinics maintained by the Boston Public Health Commission. Responsibilities and expectations: Results-driven, intensive 12 week internship First two weeks includes: orientation, certification in ethical conduct of research, research methods and skills curriculum, networking activities Subsequent weeks include active and productive conduct of research activities, regular review and revision of deliverables, active participation in longitudinal educational components, ongoing networking Note that this is a competitive internship posting: - Experience in research and in drafting abstracts papers would be preferred, but is not required. - Experience in the subject area through academic work or research would be an advantage, but is not required. - Interns must have sufficient working knowledge of English (expert reading and writing, advanced speaking) and must have German writing skills commensurate with their background. Financial support is available through the DAAD RISE program (travel costs and full stipend). Please apply by 15 Dec 2015 directly at https://www.daad.de/app-rise-ww/rise-ww/index/login In your application, please indicate why your are interested in this research area. Please also include a statement of motivation (what are your career plans and professional goals related to this internship, and how does this rotation relate to them), learning goals for this rotation (what are you trying to achieve during and after this rotation), as well as a CV and letter of recommendation from a faculty member or instructor who is familiar with you and can attest to your capabilities. To demonstrate your capabilities in academic English, please also compose a 1 page essay on a major challenge for HIV prevention in key populations (PWID or others). In your essay, briefly comment on how your research might address your chosen challenge in today s global health context.