Advanced Rehabilitation Research Fellowships
Applications are currently being accepted from candidates
with Ph.D./Psy.D.
or M.D. degrees for postdoctoral fellowships that provide advanced training
in brain injury and rehabilitation research at VCU Medical Center.
Neurobehavioral
recovery and intervention will be the training focus. The
university has a
well-established, integrated network of clinical research
programs serving persons
with traumatic brain injury and other neurological
disorders. The program offers
supervision by outstanding mentors, didactic
experiences, and independent and collaborative
research activities.
Rehab research overview
The last two decades witnessed a proliferation of rehabilitation programs to
meet the needs of persons with brain injury and other neurological
disorders. Clinical
training programs have had difficulty keeping up with
the demand for highly qualified
clinicians. More disconcerting is the
shortage of experienced researchers. The efficacy
of rehabilitation services
has been questioned. Consumers and professionals have
expressed concern that
coverage of services by third-party payers has been limited
by the lack of a
research foundation.
During the last two decades, VCU Medical Center
has developed a
well-integrated
network of clinical and research programs to help persons
with traumatic brain injury
and other neurological disorders. The medical
center's extensive resource
network includes one of the nation's largest
teaching hospitals, a CARF-accredited
inpatient rehabilitation program, a
broad array of outpatient rehabilitation programs,
a Rehabilitation Research
and Training Center, and NIDRR Traumatic Brain Injury
Model Systems of Care.
The university is home to three international rehabilitation
journals, the
international Williamsburg
brain injury conference and the National Resource
Center
on Traumatic Brain Injury.
Advanced Rehabilitation Research Training program’s focus is neurobehavioral
recovery and intervention and fellows typically receive at least two years of salary
support. Training and research activities extending over a two-year period will
address brain injury, aneurysms, brain tumors and other neurological disorders.
Individualized research training plans emphasizing scientific rigor guide fellows’
choices of training activities. Outstanding mentors, didactic experiences and collaborative
and independent research activities provide the foundation for the VCU ARRT program.
Mentors include internationally and nationally renowned, distinguished scientists
from the fields of rehabilitation medicine, neuropsychology, psychiatry, neurosurgery
and vocational rehabilitation. Core courses on ethics, conduct in scientific research,
and grant writing are complemented by grand rounds and graduate courses. All fellows
are required to complete and submit a grant application during the second year of
their fellowship.
The ultimate goal of the ARRT program is to benefit rehabilitation practice and
outcomes by increasing the number of highly skilled research professionals.