Cancer Prevention Fellowship
The Cancer Prevention Fellowship is a joint program by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Dana–Farber/Harvard Cancer Center. It trains the next generation of experts in cancer prevention and control, with emphasis on disparities, implementation science, health communication, global cancer, and population science methods.
677 Huntington Avenue, Kresge 6th floor
Boston, MA 02115
Post-doctoral Program
Applicants with doctoral degrees in the social and behavioral sciences (e.g. sociology, psychology, economics), epidemiology, biostatistics, nutrition, nursing, genetics, education, health and social behavior, or related fields or with M.D. degrees, may be accepted for a mentored postdoctoral research fellowship.
We provide two years of training support for postdoctoral trainees.
Trainees engage in mentored research, leading to participation on one or more ongoing projects to gain specialized training in cancer prevention and control.
The Program Leaders recommend a primary mentor for each fellow who will supervise the research and monitor progress. In consultation with primary mentors, fellows also identify one or more secondary mentors, with the aim of gaining diverse transdisciplinary perspectives of cancer prevention. Fellows will work under the direction of their mentors in collaborative research projects in their area of specialization.
Although they do not take course work leading to a formal degree, fellows attend and contribute to the Program’s monthly seminar series and participate in the required courses and workshops. All post-doctoral fellows participate in advanced courses as needed, from the wide range offered at Harvard Chan School and extended Harvard curricula.