Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
at the Stanford Center for Human and Planetary Health (HPH) (link is external) , is pleased to offer an exciting opportunity for a postdoctoral fellow interested in advancing interdisciplinary research and making
-
, and scientists. Primary human hematopoietic and leukemia cells, and an established humanized mouse model will be used. Technologies in the lab include standard biochemistry techniques (Western blot
-
support. The candidate must be highly organized, extremely detail-oriented, and able to multi-task and work independently. Duties include*: Act on behalf of the supervisor, department manager, or chair in
-
of the application or hiring process should contact Stanford University Human Resources by submitting a contact form . WORKING CONDITIONS : May work extended hours, evenings or weekends. May travel
-
are interested in working as part of collaborative projects and interacting with national and international consortia. Familiarity with human beta-cell models is highly desired but not essential if they have
-
and standards, and ensuring compliance and follow-up, as needed. * Act as key contact for the program to interpret and apply complex policies, procedures and program guidelines (such as those from ACGME
-
the face of cultural and race-based stressors. POSITION SUMMARY Reporting to the Principal Investigator (PI), the Research Coordinator will serve as program coordinator for the TRANSFORM intervention and
-
hypothesis driven mechanistic projects in vitamin A transport and transcriptional networks, integrating classic retinoid biology with lipid metabolism, inflammation, and translational human disease studies
-
for gift officers, faculty, and volunteer leaders. You will work directly with corporate and foundation representatives, gathering and sharing insights that inform relationship strategy, while helping donors
-
research and treatment, clinical microbiology, hospital epidemiology, AIDS, international health, mechanisms of pathogenesis, the role of microbes in chronic & unexplained disease, human microbial ecology