Skip to main content

Academic Resources

Medical Student Research

Explore More

  • Contact
  • Forms
  • Deadlines
  • Awards
  • Moremenu icon

George Harrell, MD, the founding dean of Penn State College of Medicine, established the Medical Student Research (MSR) program as an integral part of the medical school’s curriculum. It is a requirement for the MD degree.

The MSR program gives each medical student an opportunity to participate in mentored medical research. Students gain an understanding of the research process, limitations and variability of data, and an application of research to clinical practice. Projects may be in the clinical, social or basic medical sciences and may be conducted on campus or at off-campus sites, nationally or internationally.

Faculty looking for information about the MSR project, including adding projects to the list for students and work-study, should see the MSR page on the Faculty and Staff website.

MSR Funding and Awards

Contact Us

Fadia Kamal, PhD

Director of Medical Student Research
Associate Professor of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation
fkamal@pennstatehealth.psu.edu

Nicole Vasquezi-Rode

Assistant Director, Medical Student Research Program
Office of Medical Education
msr@pennstatehealth.psu.edu

Deadlines

Class of 2025

  • Jan. 17, 2025 – MSR Final Reports due

Class of 2026

  • Jan. 16, 2026 – MSR Final Reports due

Class of 2027

  • Jan. 15, 2027 – MSR Final Reports Due

Class of 2028

  • Aug. 25, 2024 – Literature review

  • Feb. 23, 2025 – CITI Training Due (All 3 sections)

  • April 25, 2025 – Work Study Deadline for student and departmental paperwork

  • April 27, 2025 – MSR Scholarship applications due (an MSR Proposal and CV must also be submitted in order to be considered)

  • May 18, 2025 – MSR Proposals due for those conducting research during the summer of 2025 (For Federal Work Study Students)

  • Jan. 16, 2028 – MSR Final Report Deadline

Forms

You can fill out Medical Student Research forms using the interactive forms below, or contact the MSR administrator to download the PDF forms. For travel forms, both the student and adviser forms must be submitted to be considered for funding.

Outstanding Research Awards

Each spring, the Office for Medical Student Research showcases research projects completed by the current fourth-year medical students during their time at Penn State College of Medicine.

2025 Award Winners

Student Name

Research Title

Advisor

Department

Ahmed Abdeen

GPR4 inhibition but not deletion is chondroprotective in late-stage murine osteoarthritis

Fadia Kamal

Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation

Gitanjali Bhushan

Lipid A modification of colistin-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae does not alter innate immune response in a mouse model of pneumonia

Danielle Ahn

Pediatrics

(Columbia University Medical Center)

Cynthia Burke

Utilization of CT for Extremity Cellulitis: A Retrospective Single-Center Analysis

Donald Flemming

General Diagnostic Radiology

Mariana Dejuk

Qualitative and quantitative relationships between comorbid seizures and dementia among hospitalized stroke patients

Alain Lekoubou Looti

Neurology

Madison Hearn

Progress and Outcomes of Intraoperative Nerve Monitoring During Thyroidectomy

Aarti Mathur

General Surgery

(Johns Hopkins)

Andrew Kim

High-Dose TXA Is Associated with Less Blood Loss Than Low-Dose TXA without Increased Complications in Patients with Complex Adult Spinal Deformity

Khaled Kebaish

Orthopaedic Surgery

(Johns Hopkins)

Elizaveta Makarova

Worse clinical outcomes of TACE when liver function is decompensated in a cohort of patients with cirrhosis and HCC waiting for liver transplantation

Elizabeth Stonesifer

Gastroenterology

Shivani Mattikalli

Implementation of Nasal CPAP Weaning Guidelines in Preterm Infants

Shaili Amatya

Neonatology

Swathi Mettela

“Pap Smear horror stories, self-loathing, feeling like I was less of a woman”: A qualitative content analysis of an online vaginismus forum

Kristin Riley

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Peter Monahan

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Is Associated With Increased Emergency Department Services and Similar Rates of Opioid Prescriptions Following Primary Total Hip Arthroplasty: A Propensity Matched Analysis

Mark Mason

Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation

Bao Sciscent

Evaluating Facial Trauma in the Amish: A study of a Unique Patient Population

Jessyka Lighthall

Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery.

Ashley Sun

Short-term and Long-Term Rates of Postacute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 Infection

A Systematic Review

Paddy Ssentongo

Public Health

Claudia Mae Velasco

Tolerability and Adverse Effects in a Specialized Heart Failure Guideline- Directed Medical Therapy Optimization Program

Omaima Ali

Cardiology

Ahmed Abdeen

GPR4 inhibition but not deletion is chondroprotective in late-stage murine osteoarthritis

Fadia Kamal

Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation

Gitanjali Bhushan

Lipid A modification of colistin-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae does not alter innate immune response in a mouse model of pneumonia

Danielle Ahn

Pediatrics

(Columbia University Medical Center)

Cynthia Burke

Utilization of CT for Extremity Cellulitis: A Retrospective Single-Center Analysis

Donald Flemming

General Diagnostic Radiology

Mariana Dejuk

Qualitative and quantitative relationships between comorbid seizures and dementia among hospitalized stroke patients

Alain Lekoubou Looti

Neurology

Madison Hearn

Progress and Outcomes of Intraoperative Nerve Monitoring During Thyroidectomy

Aarti Mathur

General Surgery

(Johns Hopkins)

Andrew Kim

High-Dose TXA Is Associated with Less Blood Loss Than Low-Dose TXA without Increased Complications in Patients with Complex Adult Spinal Deformity

Khaled Kebaish

Orthopaedic Surgery

(Johns Hopkins)

Elizaveta Makarova

Worse clinical outcomes of TACE when liver function is decompensated in a cohort of patients with cirrhosis and HCC waiting for liver transplantation

Elizabeth Stonesifer

Gastroenterology

Shivani Mattikalli

Implementation of Nasal CPAP Weaning Guidelines in Preterm Infants

Shaili Amatya

Neonatology

Swathi Mettela

“Pap Smear horror stories, self-loathing, feeling like I was less of a woman”: A qualitative content analysis of an online vaginismus forum

Kristin Riley

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Peter Monahan

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Is Associated With Increased Emergency Department Services and Similar Rates of Opioid Prescriptions Following Primary Total Hip Arthroplasty: A Propensity Matched Analysis

Mark Mason

Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation

Bao Sciscent

Evaluating Facial Trauma in the Amish: A study of a Unique Patient Population

Jessyka Lighthall

Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery.

Ashley Sun

Short-term and Long-Term Rates of Postacute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 Infection

A Systematic Review

Paddy Ssentongo

Public Health

Claudia Mae Velasco

Tolerability and Adverse Effects in a Specialized Heart Failure Guideline- Directed Medical Therapy Optimization Program

Omaima Ali

Cardiology

Frequently Asked Questions

For more detailed information, explore the Medical Student Research Guidelines.

Projects may be performed at any qualified facility, as long as this is defined in the proposal and approved by the Committee. when an off-campus research adviser will be responsible for the actual supervision of the project, the student must also have an on-campus sponsor (this can be your academic adviser); the role of the on-campus sponsor is to help ensure that your project will meet the MSR requirements, and serve as a first point of contact if your research adviser has questions. Note that if your project involves human subjects in any way, then human subjects research approval is required from the IRB at the research site, AND from the Penn State College of Medicine IRB. You will need to provide the IRB abstract from your research adviser and a copy of your sponsor's approval letter to our IRB for approval. Approval MUST be granted by the University IRB before beginning involvement with the human subjects as part of MSR. You can find more about human subjects in the MSR Guidelines.

The easiest way to identify an on-campus adviser would be to choose someone who is familiar with the kind of work you will be doing at an external institution (someone who can actually advise you, for example, on whether you are taking on a manageable role in a project, or whether your effort is suitable for an MSR). If you already have someone you work closely with here, and they are comfortable serving this additional role, that is also fine.

Your research adviser is the person who has expertise in your chosen area of research, and who actually provides day-to-day supervision of your research project.

Yes! Human research is any interaction with humans that involves data collection and analysis. This includes questionnaires, surveys, interviews, focus groups, etc., as well as scientific studies of normal or abnormal physiology and development, studies that evaluate the safety, effectiveness, or usefulness of a medical product, procedure, or intervention, and studies that involve any invasive procedures. Any research in medical education that you intend to report publicly (for example, in an MSR Final Report) requires IRB approval. You can find more about human subjects in the MSR Guidelines.

Yes! The IRB must review and approve research conducted outside the United States by Penn State employees or students, even if the foreign research receives no U.S. governmental funding. Such collaborative research activities must meet ethical standards similar to those required at PSU. The IRB may approve such research, provided it determines that

  1. the research conforms to proper codes of ethics (e.g., the Declaration of Helsinki or the Belmont Report) and

  2. the research is approved by the local ethical review authority.

Requirements for the informed consent process will follow the laws and customs of the country in which the research is being conducted. If a U.S. department or agency funds the research, then it is probable that the foreign research site will need to file a Federal Wide Assurance (FWA) application through OHRP.

Guidance on important IRB issues in international human subjects research can be found in the University Park Office of Research Protections "Guideline II, International Research Involving Human Participants." You can find more about human subjects in the MSR Guidelines.

Academic credit is available, but not required, when a student uses specific elective time to conduct their research. To obtain academic credit, the student should register for course "Subject 596 Individual Studies" in basic science departments or "Subject 796 Individual Studies" in clinical departments. The number of credits will be determined by the sponsor and will depend on the number of hours committed to the project.

Data acquisition and data reduction for a MSR project while abroad requires a considerable time commitment to the research project on the part of the student. While Penn State supports students spending time abroad in clinical settings to acquire international perspectives on health care, it is very difficult for a student to do an international clinical rotation and an acceptable MSR project simultaneously.

The decision to pay you while working on your MSR project is at the discretion of your research supervisor. Research funding is extremely difficult to obtain, and research supervisors may not have research funds to pay you. Students working on their MSR project typically are working on their project full-time during the summer after the first year of medical school. Most projects at Penn State can be supported by federal work study positions for summer work, but both you and your adviser must fill out forms by April 1 to qualify. Work study funds will pay for three-quarters of the salary of a student. The department or adviser is responsible for the remainder. Research at sites other than Penn State cannot be supported by work study. Students may not be paid while enrolled in research electives for academic credit.