Anonymous wrote:
An NIH fellowship is generally the right to work at the NIH for a specific period of time and a specific research topic. My husband received one for his post-doctorate work.
Once you have your PhD and/or MD (my DH has both) and apply for a fellowship with all your relevant qualifications, published work and experience, it is not that difficult to obtain.
The difficulty resides in getting said qualifications.
Anonymous wrote:What does that mean? It's a good thing but it's not winning the nobel prize. There's just no "measure" of prestige. Congrulate your cousin when you see him and your aunt and just smile and nod as she brags on and on. You don't have to overthink this.
Anonymous wrote:My cousin was recently awarded an NIH fellowship in cardiology.
My aunt was rejoicing and saying how prestigious those are. Is that true?
Are NIH fellowships really that prestigious?
Anonymous wrote:Congrats, that is a nice accomplishment. Anyone willing to go into medical research gets kuddos in my book.
What are you doing OP to make the world a better place?
Anonymous wrote:Yeah they are prestigious and competitive. Why is this an issue?