Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Job Description The Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health at the National University of Singapore is currently seeking a dedicated Research Assistant/Associate in Field Epidemiology to join a
-
applicant(s) will work as part of a growing and energetic team investigating health at the interface of clinical epidemiology and infectious diseases in local and international contexts. The successful
-
PhD in a relevant field such as health economics and outcomes research, statistics, and epidemiology; • Expertise in instrument development for clinical or healthcare decision making; • Proficiency in
-
(desirable but not essential). • Experience with epidemiological modelling of infectious diseases (especially sexually transmitted diseases). • Experience with data analysis using statistical inference
-
change and epidemiology, machine learning and global health. This work will allow you to collaborate with a broad range of people at the School of Public Health as well as public health professionals and
-
climate, environment and health. This position offers the opportunity to work on ground-breaking research projects in the broad areas of climate change and epidemiology, machine learning and global health
-
health research concerning children, adolescents and emerging adults. The Youth Epidemiology and Resilience (YEAR) Study is a nationwide epidemiology study that aims to survey the mental health status and
-
Policy, Public Health, Public Administration, Epidemiology, Nursing, Biostatistics, Social Sciences or a related discipline. Proficiency in medical terminology, evidence-based medicine and the utilisation
-
specialisation related to statistics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative social science, public health, epidemiology or related field (2) be proficient in Stata or R and (3) Have proven ability to conduct
-
advanced degree in a relevant field (e.g., nutrition, public health, epidemiology, clinical research). Experience in clinical trials, experience on decentralized trials is preferred but not essential. Strong