Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
12 months of employment. A retirement program with a generous employer contribution and additional voluntary retirement programs (457 or 403b) are available. https://www.kumc.edu/human-resources
-
the existing expertise within both the Department and the broader KUMC research community. Job Description: Job Duties Establish and maintain an externally funded, independent research program in areas such as
-
after 12 months of employment. A retirement program with a generous employer contribution and additional voluntary retirement programs (457 or 403b) are available. https://www.kumc.edu/human-resources
-
retirement program with a generous employer contribution and additional voluntary retirement programs (457 or 403b) are available. https://www.kumc.edu/human-resources/benefits.html Employee Type: Regular Time
-
Summary: The Research Assistant position supports a cancer bioinformatics program focused on integrative analyses of transcriptomic, proteomic, and other multi-omics datasets. The role involves developing
-
for bereavement, jury duty, military service, and parental leave is available after 12 months of employment. A retirement program with a generous employer contribution and additional voluntary retirement programs
-
Research Protection Program and have a working knowledge of KUMC policies and procedures. Attend continuing education, research and training seminars as requested by manager. This job description is not
-
, jury duty, military service, and parental leave is available after 12 months of employment. A retirement program with a generous employer contribution and additional voluntary retirement programs (457
-
application materials. An active research program with external funding. Required Documents: Resume/CV Cover Letter If selected as a final candidate for this position, you may be required to complete
-
Research Assistant Professor – Internal Medicine (Endocrinology, Diabetes and Clinical Pharmacology)
, Diabetes, and Clinical Pharmacology at the University of Kansas Medical Center supports an NIH-funded program focused on islet biology and metabolic disease. Collaborating closely with principal investigator