The Division of Child Neurology at Weill Cornell Medicine is seeking a full-time pediatric neurology physician for a faculty position in the Division to expand our busy and growing pediatric neurology program. This position will include clinical responsibilities at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center in Manhattan, New York City.
The Division of Child Neurology at Weill Cornell Medicine is seeking a full-time pediatric epilepsy physician for a faculty position in the Division to expand our busy and growing pediatric epilepsy program, including video EEG monitoring and surgical epilepsy planning. This position will include clinical responsibilities at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center in Manhattan, New York City.
The Department of Pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medicine (WCM ) is seeking a Director of Pediatric Cardiac Catheterization for its Division of Pediatric Cardiology. The Department includes twelve (12) academic subspecialty divisions and 145 full-time faculty members. There are also 300 voluntary faculty members on the academic staff of the department.
The Department of Pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medicine is accepting applications for a Pediatric Integrated Care Clinician within pediatric primary care. This role will join a larger behavioral health team and contribute to programming benefiting children, adolescents, and young adults. The clinician will be responsible for the assessment and delivery of mental health services in the outpatient primary care setting.
Clinical and training activities will include:
Interested in exploring the role of adipose tissues in mucosal inflammation in a supportive, creative, and inclusive environment? We are looking for a team-oriented, collaborative, proactive postdoc to play an active role in growing our research program. You would lead your own project and work with other lab members to make the most out of our samples from gnotobiotic models and human tissues.
The trajectory of human health is established in childhood and the costliest diseases of adulthood have their origins in early life. Yet, innovations in health specifically designed for children are infrequent and slow to be implemented, as demonstrated by the recent slow roll out of this century’s most impactful intervention, mRNA vaccines, to children.