10 phd-in-architecture-and-built-environment-"Prof" Fellowship positions at University of London
-
to cancer treatment delays. The successful candidate will join 50 researchers on 10 National Cancer Audits https://www.natcan.org.uk/ . The postholder will report to Prof Ajay Aggarwal (co-PI, TACTIC and
-
for an enthusiastic and highly motivated Research Fellow to join the world-leading tuberculosis (TB) Modelling group at LSHTM. The successful candidate will be supervised by Dr Rebecca Clark and Prof Richard White and
-
relevant PhD and medical degree alongside registration with the GMC at Specialist Registrar Garde or below. You will have a recent track record in histopathology and use of machine learning techniques, and
-
of the research project and develop new areas of research. The post-holder will be expected to undertake a higher degree such as a PhD during the fellowship. About You The applicant must be a medically qualified
-
degree, ideally a PhD, in health economics, medical statistics, data science, epidemiology or a related field. A clear conceptual understanding of causal inference methods such as instrumental variable
-
will have a PhD in a related field, an emerging track record of outstanding publications, and well-developed plans for new research projects. This post is generously funded by the A. G. Leventis
-
, Professors Ruth Keogh and Kate Walker. Applicants should have a postgraduate degree, ideally a PhD, in medical statistics, epidemiology, health economics or a related field. Relevant experience in applying
-
working towards one, or to be able to demonstrate comparable experience in a formal teaching environment. Further particulars are included in the job description. The post is full-time, 35 hours per week
-
analytic codes to investigate the benefits and harms of medications. Candidates must have a doctoral degree (or be within 3 months of anticipated completion of a PhD) in medical statistics or epidemiology
-
to undertake health impact modelling on two projects related to the health of older people. The first project, ‘Accelerating Resilience and Climate Adaptation of Domestic Environments for vulnerable