Junior Research Analyst - Vancouver, Canada - University of British Columbia

Sophia Lee

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Description
Staff - Non Union

Job Category

M&P - AAPS

Job Profile

AAPS Salaried - Research and Facilitation, Level A

Job Title

Junior Research Analyst

Department

Therapeutics Initiative | Department of Anesthesiology, Pharmacology and Therapeutics | Faculty of Medicine

Compensation Range

$4, $6,754.00 CAD Monthly

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In the normal course, employees will be hired, transferred or promoted between the minimum and midpoint of the salary range for a job.

Posting End Date

May 1, 2023

Note:
Applications will be accepted until 11:59 PM on the day prior to the Posting End Date above.

Job End Date

May 14, 2024


At UBC, we believe that attracting and sustaining a diverse workforce is key to the successful pursuit of excellence in research, innovation, and learning for all faculty, staff and students.

Our commitment to employment equity helps achieve inclusion and fairness, brings rich diversity to UBC as a workplace, and creates the necessary conditions for a rewarding career.

Job Summary

To work as part of a research team studying prescription drug utilization, appropriateness of use, and population health outcomes as well as provincial drug policy


Major responsibilities include:

writing computer programs for administrative data analysis, conducting literature reviews and syntheses, conducting trend and statistical analysis, writing research abstracts, and presenting complex analysis in a clear and effective manner.

Organizational Status

Reports directly to Drs. Anat Fisher and Greg Carney, co-Chairs of the Pharmacoepidemiology Group of the Therapeutics Initiative.


Liaisons with:

  • Clinicians, Executives, and staff of the Therapeutics Initiative
  • Team members of the Canadian Network for Observational Drug Effects Studies (CNODES)
  • Project members
  • Data Access Services, B.C. Ministry of Health
  • Ethics Review Boards of UBC
  • UBC employees
  • Professors, students, and researchers at the University of British Columbia, and other universities
Work Performed

Participating in the statistical analysis of prescription drug studies using very large administrative databases and chart data and assisting with CNODES cohort studies, as needed


Duties include:

  • Research Analysis.

Uses statistical analysis packages (Frequent use:
SAS and SQL, occasional use: STATA and R) to analyze very large healthcare administrative databases. Writes and executes SAS code to support CNODES projects and BC Ministry of Health deliverables. Includes quality assurance testing and documenting coding methods. Participation in study design and interpreting results.


  • Physician prescribing portrait feedback development, production, and evaluation. Uses SAS, SQL, R to produce portraits of trends in physician prescribing by patient subgroups. Work with physicians and project staff on formats for presenting results, in combination with evidence from literature, into portraits that are visually appealing to end users.
  • Literature review. To guide statistical analyses and interpretation of results, conducts review of literature and contributes to presentations and papers.
  • To maintain collaboration among the dispersed members of the research team and manage differences of opinion among members of the team, in collaboration with the Research Analyst, the Junior Research Analyst participates in developing and maintaining an efficient communication system that is respectful of how busy the collaborators are.
  • Knowledge Exchange. To engage decision-makers in formulating queries of the data and interpreting results, the Junior Research Analyst interacts one-to-one with users throughout the analysis, and documents queries and responses.
  • Writing. Writes research abstracts and summary reports.
Participation in national meetings and conferences might be required (eg 1 / year)

Consequence of Error/Judgement


Errors or missteps in communication could produce friction among collaborators due to strong differences of opinion to how drug safety and effectiveness studies should be designed and implemented.

Accuracy and timeliness of tasks are critical in keeping research projects on time and on budget. Errors can lead to significant project delays

Supervision Received

Works under the supervision of Drs.

Greg Carney and Anat Fisher, who conducts some analyses for both the BC Ministry of Health and CNODES cohort studies, provides guidance on the databases and advice on analyses conducted by the Junior Research Analyst.

Supervision Given

Part-time research assistants and medical/co-op students conducting short-term projects.

Minimum Qualifications

Undergraduate degree in a relevant discipline. Minimum of two years of related experience, or an equi

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