Tuition Fee
Not Available
Start Date
Not Available
Medium of studying
On campus
Duration
7 years
Details
Program Details
Degree
PhD
Major
Biomedical Sciences | Medicine | Biotechnology
Area of study
Health | Natural Science
Education type
On campus
Timing
Full time
Course Language
English
About Program
Program Overview
Introduction to the MD-PhD Dual Degree Program
The goal of Columbia's Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP) is to train the next generation of biomedical leaders. Our program emphasizes both clinical and scientific education. The academic environment at Columbia fosters innovative scholarship and nurtures the vision to translate scientific findings to clinical practice.
Program Overview
- The MD-PhD curriculum includes 1.5 years devoted to the basic science courses of the Medical School.
- Students will do two clinical rotations, followed by 3 or 4 years of graduate study, which is supplemented by an ongoing clinical tutorial.
- After their thesis defense, students have a final 11-month major clinical year.
- Students typically complete both degrees in 7 years, with some students taking 8 years and a rare student finishing in 6 years.
Research Opportunities
- Scholarly training opportunities are broad, including all traditional biomedical sciences, plus Chemistry, Bioengineering, Biomedical Informatics, Epidemiology, Cancer Biology, Computational and Systems Biology, Stem Cell Biology, Genomics, and Precision Medicine.
- Excellent opportunities exist for cross-disciplinary studies.
Program Leadership and Faculty
- Our world-class faculty members are involved in a wide range of research and clinical care.
- Columbia's MSTP is a close collaboration between faculty members and students with the single aim of training outstanding physician-scientists who will lead the next generation of biomedical researchers.
About the Program
- The history of Columbia's MD-PhD Dual Degree Program is rich and focused on training the next generation of biomedical leaders.
- The program ensures that talented trainees have abundant interaction with their scientific and clinical mentors.
See More
