Columbia University brentwood , NY 11717
Posted 1 week ago
Job Type: Officer of Administration
Bargaining Unit:
Regular/Temporary: Regular
End Date if Temporary:
Hours Per Week: 35
Standard Work Schedule:
Building:
Salary Range: $85,000.00 - 95,000.00
The salary of the finalist selected for this role will be set based on a variety of factors, including but not limited to departmental budgets, qualifications, experience, education, licenses, specialty, and training. The above hiring range represents the University's good faith and reasonable estimate of the range of possible compensation at the time of posting.
Position Summary
The candidate will work with the Department of Neurology, Taub institute on clinical studies involving patients with Alzheimer's Disease and related disorders and heathy volunteers. The Project Manager will manage a large NIH funded research study and research technicians working on the project. They will be responsible for supervising all aspects of the study including regulatory reporting, data organization, participant recruitment and study visits.
Responsibilities
Coordinate and manage regulatory procedures for human subject research (e.g., IRB protocol, consent forms, interview data).
Prepare applications/reports for IRB, FDA, clinicaltrials.gov, and research sponsors (e.g., NIH).
Oversee and schedule research participant visits (Screening, Neuropsychological battery administration, MRI & PET scans)
Recruit new participants from IRB approved sources (RecruitMe, ResearchMatch, etc.)
Review and correct invoices
Oversee the data processing for the study and review for data quality assurance
Other duties as assigned
Minimum Qualifications
Other Requirements
Enthusiastic and exceptionally motivated
Excellent organizational and interpersonal skills
Ability to perform meticulous record keeping
Excellent communication and writing skills and ability to work as a member of a team and individual
Equal Opportunity Employer / Disability / Veteran
Columbia University is committed to the hiring of qualified local residents.
Columbia University