The American College of Rheumatology and the Arthritis Foundation:
The purpose of the Doctoral Dissertation Award is to advance the research training of arthritis health professionals in
their investigative or clinical teaching careers related to the rheumatic diseases. This award provides one or two years
of salary and/or research support. The research project must be related to arthritis management and/or comprehensive
patient care in rheumatology practice, research or education. Not for laboratory research. The award is for $30,000
per year.
http://www.arthritis.org/funding-opportunities-training.php
These awards were created to honor young investigators whose research projects complement an overall program of research, teaching and clinical medicine. To be considered, a candidate must be a physician who has held a full-time medical school faculty appointment for five years or less.
http://www.afmr.org/awards.cgi
This program offers a total of five one-year awards in the amount of $70,000 total costs each. Institutional indirect costs of up to 8% will be allowed. Only one award per institution will be made. The number of applications submitted per institution is not restricted. Applicants for the ASCI's Young Investigator Awards must be M.D. or M.D./Ph.D. investigators:
http://www.asci-jci.org/grants.shtml
The Clinical Scientist Awards in Translational Research program supports established independent physician-scientists who are dedicated to translational research.
http://www.bwfund.org/programs/translational/clinical_scientists_apply.html
The CRCC provides seed money for pilot projects (up to $50,000) to promote innovative cancer research for labs with total annual budgets of $350,000 or less. Assistant professors beginning their research programs at UC are especially encouraged to apply. Applicant must be a member of the Academic Senate, and employed minimum 50% time on UC administered payrolls at one of the ten UC campuses. Deadline: Friday, Dec. 15, 2006, 5 p.m. Applications are available at all UC Contracts and Grants Offices or online at
http://crcc.ucdavis.edu.
The subject program will provide $125,000/year for 3 years to Assistant Professors conducting clinical research in any disease area (previous years areas have been designated; 2 of our faculty members received 2006 awards, Sanjiv Narayan and Catherine Todd.)
Applicants must hold the M.D. degree and have been appointed to first faculty position between January 2002 and 2007. Applicants may NOT hold an NIH RO1, or be PI on a PO1 component.Proposals, CV and one letter of recommendation are due to
rcovell@ucsd.edu by January 2, 2007. Please consult
http://www.ddcf.org/page.asp?pageId=291
Supports innovative, high impact projects that demonstrate a clear path to commercialization from the lab to the patient. Priority will be given to proposals that already have a commercial partner.
http://www.epilepsytdp.org/sec/available_grants
To enable junior faculty to carry out original research on policy and clinical dilemmas at the intersection of ethics and the life sciences.
http://medicine.ucsf.edu/greenwall
Designated for an Assistant Professor based at a California medical school who would devote his or her career to the study of dementia. Specialty training is not required, but recommended. It is expected that the person receiving this award will become a significantly strong participant in dementia research by the end of the four-year award period. This award could be renewable for outstanding performance. The receiving university may not use these funds to offset the salary of the recipient.
Contact Dr. Ruth Covell for details
rcovell@ucsd.edu
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Physician Faculty Scholars Program is intended to strengthen the leadership and academic productivity of junior medical school faculty dedicated to improving health and health care.
http://www.rwjf.org/applications/solicited/cfp.jsp?ID=19591
We may nominate ONE candidate for the subject award to nurture the development of exceptionally promising physician scientists as they transition to independent careers. Nominees shall have received an MD in 1999 or later; have had at least one year of postdoctoral training; and shall not have a rank higher than assistant professor. Research must be relevant to human health. The award is $108,000/year for three years.
(see
http://www.4cures.org/sitecontent )
Please let me know if you are interested. Submit proposal, CV, and one letter of recommendation electronically to
rcovell@ucsd.edu by July 5. Email or call x44842 if any questions.
The subject awards are for licensed MDs/MD-PhDs who show promise for innovative translational research. The "ideal candidate" will be an assistant professor with an R01 who has published independently. Candidates may also be in the early years at the associate professor rank. The awards are $750,000 ($150,000 for 5 years). We may submit a total of FOUR applicants if one is a female and another is an under-represented minority. Candidates must have an appointment in a subspecialty. Applicants in reproductive medicine are especially encouraged.
Please let me know if you are interested in applying. The application, a C.V., and one letter are due in my office electronically by July 6. Please email
rcovell@ucsd.edu or call x44842 if any questions.
This Notice is to inform the scientific community that the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) has joined the list of NIH Institutes/Centers participating in the Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards for Individual Predoctoral MD/PhD Fellows .
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-DK-07-011.html