Predoctoral Fellowship in Translational Medicine
The PhRMA Foundation’s Predoctoral Fellowship in Translational Medicine supports promising students (U.S. and non-U.S. citizens) in advanced stages of training and thesis research in translational medicine.
Letter of Intent Deadline: May 1, 2024, at 12:00 p.m. (noon) ET
Duration
Applications will be accepted for a minimum of one year and a maximum of two years of stipend support.
Funding
$30,000 per year, up to two years
Eligibility
- Applicants (U.S. and non-U.S. citizens) must attend an accredited U.S. university as full-time, in-residence students.
- Individuals just beginning graduate school should not apply. Applicants must have completed most of their pre-thesis requirements (at least two years of coursework) and be engaged in thesis research as PhD candidates by the time the award is activated. Award activation can begin as early as January 1, 2025, or as late as August 1, 2025.
- Applicants should expect to complete their PhD requirements in two years or less from the time funding begins. The thesis advisor’s letter of support must verify the applicant’s doctoral candidacy.
- Applicants who expect to complete their PhD before December 31, 2025, are not eligible.
- Applicants enrolled in MD/PhD programs should not be engaged in required clinical coursework or clerkships while the fellowship is active. Fellows are expected to devote full time (including summers) to their research.
- Predoctoral fellowships should not be seen as a way to fund the principal investigator’s currently funded research project.
- Only one predoctoral applicant per lab may apply for this award. If multiple applicants apply, they will automatically be ineligible. Potential applicants and their thesis advisors and/or lab managers should decide who should apply.
- The Foundation will not consider multiple applications for similar efforts on the same project. For instance, if a predoc, postdoc, and faculty member from the same lab are all submitting applications for proposed efforts on the same project, the efforts must be separate activities and not duplicative.
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