Science training abroad: The US National Institutes of Health
(Second of two parts)
In my second year as a graduate student in
The NIH is the centerpiece of biomedical research of the
Each institute has an extramural and intramural branch. The extramural branch’s task is to distribute the money budgeted by the US Congress to different scientists scattered across the
I was with the intramural branch. Each institute is given a budget and does the research unencumbered by the rigorous scoring of the extramural branch, but every five years or so the external panel of experts reviews the intramural branch. Each laboratory’s research output (publications), budget, personnel, and research thrusts are evaluated and a recommendation is issued.
The NIH also funds clinical trials. Medicines are tested in different phases to prove they are effective as well as safe for human use.
For a Filipino trained in
One thing that was similar about Nekken and NIH is the international flavor of the laboratories. In PCCMB, just as in Nekken, the foreigners outnumber the native-born. NIH is more diverse as there are now more Europeans and South Americans. My experience in dealing with the Japanese and other international students in Nekken and NIH proved very valuable in my life. I am more diversity-conscious. I have learned to respect other cultures. And surprisingly, I have sharpened my skills in Japanese because the lab was full of Japanese fellows.
When I arrived in NIH, the Filipinos working there were not even acquainted with one another. The medical fellows did not know the basic scientists. Since I knew the MDs as well as the PhDs, I got them together and until today the Filipino scientists in NIH are intact as a group.
One thing that struck me when I arrived was the miniscule number of Filipino scientists being trained in NIH. At any one time, there was just an average of seven to eight Filipino scientist fellows. Compare that number to around 400 Japanese and 300 Chinese fellows. What could be the reason for this small number? I don’t really know but I speculate that we don’t have enough scientists qualified to train in NIH (PhD grads). And those who are qualified do not even know such opportunities exist unless they were educated in the
The NIH offers its trainees a plethora of opportunities. It has long-term courses on bioethics, introduction to clinical research, animal research ethics and protocols, and access to the database of the National Library of Medicine. It has also its own graduate school: the Foundation for Advanced Education in the Sciences (FAES), which offers courses on statistics, biochemistry, biology, languages and short-term training in the latest in molecular biology protocols and techniques.
For those who are interested in training in NIH, go to the website www.nih.gov and click on “fellowship” or “training.” Write the investigator and communicate with him/her your interest and scientific career plan. My almost seven years of NIH training prepared me for my eventual role as physician-scientist in UP Visayas.
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Dr. Philip Ian Padilla is a graduate of the UP College of Medicine, Class 1992. He recently returned to the University of the
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