Research Program Coordinator
Job Description
The Department of International Health is seeking a casual Research Program Coordinator. This role will support a systematic review to identify and synthesize processes, outcomes, and impact of checking vaccination status in childcare, primary school, or secondary school settings in high-income countries. This work will complement a similar review conducted by the US CDC focused on low- and middle-income countries. The findings from this systematic review will inform recommendations and development of implementation guidance for checking vaccination status at schools as a strategy to increase immunization coverage in school-aged children.
Specific Duties & Responsibilities
- Roles will include participating in the full-text screening, data abstraction, and synthesis of findings for the final report and publication.
- Support development of protocol and data collection tools.
- Conduct full text review based on pre-determined inclusion / exclusion criteria.
- Contribute to review of outcomes of interest.
- Extract relevant data from relevant articles.
- Support systematic review manuscript development as a co-author.
- Support development of slides and report to funder (WHO and CDC).
- Provide additional support as needed.
Minimum Qualifications
- Bachelor's degree in related discipline.
- Additional related experience may substitute for required education, to the extent permitted by the JHU equivalency formula.
Preferred Qualifications
- 3 years related experience.
Classified Title: Research Program Coordinator
Job Posting Title (Working Title): Research Program Coordinator
Role/Level/Range: ACRO40/E/03/CD
Starting Salary Range: $17.20 - $30.30 HRLY ($23.00 HRLY targeted; Commensurate with experience)
Employee group: Casual / On Call
Schedule: Casual; as needed
Exempt Status: Non-Exempt
Location: Hybrid: On-site 1-2 days a week
Department name: 60000552-IH - Int'l Vaccine Access Center (IVAC)
Personnel area: School of Public Health
*Please mention you saw this ad on WomenInTheSciences.*