U.S. Health Equity Postdoc Research Fellow at Harvard University


Registration deadline

Harvard's Department of Global Health and Social Medicine stands out for its unique biosocial, interdisciplinary approach to research and training and its unique focus on improving global health delivery and promoting health equity worldwide. Problems of health equity are biosocial phenomena and addressing them requires insights from both the biological and social sciences. Our department faculty are trained in disciplines including anthropology, history, sociology, economics, ecology, epidemiology, implementation science, and bioethics. Department faculty use tools and insights from these disciplines to understand how poverty and inequality affect health care access and outcomes. In collaboration with community-based and other clinical organizations, department faculty apply these understandings to develop and evaluate interventions that improve health care delivery and close gaps in health equity.

Fellows will be early-career researchers who will spend two years based in the department. Their primary responsibility will be to pursue an original research project of their own design to advance a more equitable and efficient U.S. health care system. We seek fellows whose field research sites will be in low-income settings. Fellows will be assigned two mentors. The primary mentor will be a Global Health and Social Medicine faculty member who has overlapping research expertise or interest in the area of the Fellow’s proposed research topic. The co-mentor will be a faculty member either from within the department or from another Harvard University school and department, who specializes in the field most relevant to the selected fellow’s proposal. In addition to a fellowship stipend, research and professional development funding will be available.

Postdoctoral fellows will pursue projects investigating critical issues such as expanding access to care, strengthening health systems, and testing community-based interventions—all with the goal of informing scalable changes that could benefit millions of Americans.


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