Clinical Neurology and Neuroscience Fellowships
Clinical Neurology Fellowships
Clinical fellowship training is available in many subspecialties, including clinical neurophysiology (with subspecialty in epilepsy, neuromuscular disease, or intraoperative monitoring), stroke/vascular neurology, multiple sclerosis, neuro-critical care, neuro-oncology, and movement disorders. In general, applicants should have completed neurology residency by the time of entry into the fellowship and have a US license to practice medicine.
Neuroscience Fellowships
Residents in Stanford Neurology are eligible for the Neuroscience Scholar Track. Stanford is also home to many neuroscience investigators. Information may be obtained from each investigator's web site, or from the Stanford Institute for Neuro-Innovation & Translational Neuroscience (SINTN), the Stanford Bio-X program, and the Stanford Health Research and Policy Department.
Applicants should contact individual program directors listed below for further information.
Clinical Fellowships |
|
| Epilepsy/Clinical Neurophysiology | Robert Fisher, MD, PhD |
| EMG/Neurophysiology (joint Stanford-California Pacific) |
Les Dorfman, MD |
| Headache | Robert Cowan, MD |
| Intraoperative Monitoring /Clinical Neurophysiology |
Jaime Lopez, MD |
| Stroke/Vascular Neurology | Gregory Albers, MD |
| Neurocritical care | Christine Wijman, MD, PhD |
| Adult Neuro-oncology | Lawrence Recht, MD |
| Pediatric Neuro-oncology | Paul Fisher, MD |
| Movement Disorders | Helen Bronte-Stewart, MD |
| Multiple Sclerosis | Jeffrey Dunn, MD |
| Neuromuscular Diseases | John Day, MD, PhD |
Neuroscience Fellowships |
|
| Epilepsy Research Training | John Huguenard, PhD |
| Muscle Stem Cell Biology | Tom Rando, MD, PhD |
| Neuroscience Graduate Program | John Huguenard, PhD |
| Others | (please contact individual investigators) |
International Medical Students
We accept applications from international medical school graduates, although the application process is extremely competitive. Some clinical experience in the U.S. is mandatory. Only a select few with exceptional credentials are invited for interview. An international medical school graduate must have a valid ECFMG certificate, completed USMLE Part III, and one year of ACGME approved residency training prior to commencement of neurology training. (Two years of pediatric residency training prior to neurology is required for pediatric neurology candidates.) Stanford does NOT sponsor trainees for the H-1B visa.
| Last updated 11/28/2012 |

