How to Find a Mentor and Funding GHIG Lunch Talk 10/8/2013
Preparing to Contact Potential Mentors It helps if you are interested in a particular country or topic area (infectious diseases, surgery, women’s health, etc) If you’re not sure, or are willing to go where your mentor may lead you, then be sure to mention that Be persistent! Sometimes faculty are busy, and may not respond immediately
Primary Contacts Dr. Peter Veldkamp Dr. Thuy Bui Dr. Puyana Dr. Erika Fink Non-Pitt faculty
Global Health Networking Reception GHIG has invited faculty in global health medicine and other students who have done international work for this mixer Great opportunity to network and informally speak with many potential mentors November 4th, 6pm, 1105a/b
Center for Global Health website Lists affiliated faculty, contact details, and areas of specialization/research interest ffiliate-faculty.php ffiliate-faculty.php
Finding your Own Project AMSA has international opportunities site ducationCareerDevelopment/IntlHealthOp ps.aspx ducationCareerDevelopment/IntlHealthOp ps.aspx
Finding your Own Project Even if you decide to perform research with an outside organization, to qualify for funding from Pitt, you will need to find a faculty mentor in addition to a local mentor – not a big deal
Funding your Summer Research Start early! Many of these applications are due soon after winter break Don’t feel like you need to have a flawless proposal Ask and work with your mentor Don’t reinvent the wheel – look to previous projects
Advice Be flexible – the ideal project may not be out there Read recent literature about the state of global health research Can be basic, clinical, or public health Research (IRB) versus QI Start early!
Funding Opportunities 1.Nationality Rooms Scholarships ($2000-$5000)- funding for international projects, due mid January 2.Dean's Summer Research Grant ($3000)- hypothesis driven research, proposal due mid February. See Zone for more details 3. Medical Alumni Association Summer Enrichment Program ($1000-$2500) - clinical or research experience in medically underserved areas, proposals usually due in March 4. Global Health Travel Scholarships (up to $3000)- research project must address a global health issue, and preference will be given to projects conducted in a developing country or resource-poor setting, application due February 12, International Studies Fund (up to $1000) - conduct research on international issues or in an international setting. Application due Mar. 15, Department Funding 7.Outside funding (CDC, NIH, Outside mentors, subject-specific) Deadlines often earlier!
Questions? Next: MS2’s discuss their experiences