spacer image
Untitled Document

About ComACC

Bylaws

Commissioners

Links

Standards and Guidelines

Self-Study Guidelines

Training Programs

ComACC Home

 


COMACC HOME > Training Programs > Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions

Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions

Director:

Address:

Daniel W. Chan, PhD, DABCC, FACB
Telephone: (410) 955-2674
FAX: (410) 955-0767
E-mail: dchan@jhmi.edu

Department of Pathology, Meyer B-121
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
600 N. Wolfe Street
Baltimore, MD 21287-7065



Co-Director:
Lori J. Sokoll, Ph.D.
Telephone: (410) 955-2673
FAX: (410) 614-7609
E-mail: lsokoll@jhmi.edu

 

Faculty and Research Interests

Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions

Daniel W. Chan, PhD, DABCC

Cancer proteomics, tumor markers, immunoassay automation

William Clarke, Ph.D., DABCC

Transplant biomarkers, drug assay development, pharmacogenomics

Gary Green, M.D., M.P.H.

Cardiovascular disease

Paul Ladenson, MD

Thyroid and adrenal disorders

Jinong Li, Ph.D.

Clinical proteomics, serum biomarkers, breast and prostate cancers

Alan W. Partin, M.D., Ph.D.

Prostate Cancer

Lori J. Sokoll, PhD Tumor markers, immunoassays

Zhen Zhang, Ph.D.

Bioinformatics, mathematical and computational algorithms

 

Program Listing:

Level(s) of training:
Number of positions available per year:
Duration of program:
Approximate annual salary or stipend:
Source of funding:
Current number of trainees:
Number of past graduates (over last 10 years):

Postdoctoral
1
2 years
Commensurate with experience
University
2
9 (since 1997)

 

Application Procedures:

Prerequisites: Applicants must have an earned Doctor of Medicine degree or Doctor of Philosophy (or an equivalent doctoral degree) in the basic sciences; chemistry, biology or physics from an accredited university or college. Applicants should have successfully completed enough chemistry courses to apply to the American Board of Clinical Chemistry, i.e., a minimum of 30 semester hours (or equivalent) in undergraduate and/or graduate level chemistry or biochemistry courses taken at institutions acceptable to the Board

Procedures:

Submit a letter of intent and curriculum vitae for initial consideration. Selected applicants will be required to complete a formal application and submit transcripts and three letters of recommendation. (Johns Hopkins does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, religion, homosexuality, nation or ethnic origin, age, disability, or veteran status in any student program or activity administered by the University or with regard to admission or employment.)

Deadline:

None


Program Description:

The Department of Pathology offers a one- or two-year fellowship to provide MD pathologists and PhD scientists with the analytical, clinical, research, and management experience towards specialization and board certification in clinical chemistry. The Chemistry Division performs over seven million tests each year in state-of-the-art laboratories that provide 24-hour service to The Johns Hopkins Hospital, the Bayview Medical Center , and several community outpatient facilities. The fellow rotates through routine automated chemistry (high-volume testing), critical care (blood gases, stat testing), special chemistry (immunoassay for endocrine function and tumor markers, trace metal analysis) and drug analysis (therapeutic and abused drug testing) laboratories. The program is designed to provide training in the operation of a clinical laboratory, quality control and assurance, laboratory management, analytical methodologies and test interferences. The clinical interpretation and diagnostic relevance of tests are emphasized through clinical consults. Research projects could involve method development, test validation, and clinical and scientific investigation in any of the areas within clinical chemistry. The structure of the program is flexible to afford individualized training based on previous experience.