Graduate Program in Quantitative Biomedical Sciences
The QBS program was established in July of 2010 to develop, advance and support interdisciplinary education, research and infrastructure in the quantitative biomedical sciences including bioengineering, bioinformatics, biophysics, biostatistics, computational biology, genomics, epidemiology, proteomics, structural biology, and systems biology.
The Molecular and Cellular Biology (MCB) Program
The Molecular and Cellular Biology (MCB) program at Dartmouth is an interactive and collegial community of scientists dedicated to innovative, world-class research in molecular and cellular biology. In this environment, we train our diverse student population to become precise and creative thinkers who impact science and society through the completion of a Ph.D. degree.
Dartmouth Cancer Center
The Cancer Epidemiology and Chemoprevention Research Program is a multidisciplinary interaction between laboratory investigators, biostatisticians, epidemiologists, and clinicians, who work to understand the etiology and mechanisms involved in the chemoprevention of cancer.
The Center for Molecular Epidemiology
The Center for Molecular Epidemiology is an Institutional Development Award (IDeA), funded by the National Institutes of General Medical Sciences, that is transforming the research capacity at Dartmouth’s Geisel School of Medicine by stimulating high impact research, and translating cutting-edge approaches to enhance human health discoveries.
The New Hampshire Birth Cohort Study
The New Hampshire Birth Cohort Study is a study of pregnant women who use private wells. Emerging data indicate that exposure to relatively low levels of arsenic during pregnancy may adversely affect both the mother and child. The current study focuses on the effects of arsenic exposure during pregnancy on two major indicators of chronic illnesses prevalent in the US population - blood pressure (linked to cardiovascular disease) and glucose metabolism (linked to diabetes and risk factor for cardiovascular disease).
Geisel School of Medicine
Department of Molecular and Systems Biology
Department of Community & Family Medicine