Once you’ve completed your doctoral study, you’ll enter the early post-doctoral stage of clinical academic medicine. This is the point where you begin to define your own research interests and establish yourself as an independent investigator, all while maintaining progress in your clinical specialty or service work.
You will be balancing clinical work and research. You are expected to have prior research experience (including publications, presentations or supervised projects), and you’ll be ready to develop your own research direction under the guidance of senior clinical academics and mentors.
What opportunities are available
Early post-doctoral clinical academics can access a range of structured fellowships and lectureships across the UK. These posts provide protected research time alongside clinical work, helping you establish yourself as an independent investigator.
The primary and most structured entry route into early postdoctoral clinical academia is the Clinical Lectureship (CL). These posts are designed for doctors who have finished their pre-doctoral training (usually academic clinical fellowships) and are at an appropriate point in their clinical specialty training (e.g. ST3 level or above).
- Clinical Lectureships are a formal dual-role position where time is split 50/50 between clinical work and protected research time.
- They enable the doctor to develop their research portfolio, secure “starter” grants and work towards obtaining an independent fellowship to fund their next career stage.
- They typically run for a maximum of four years or until the award of the Certificate of Completion of Training (CCT), whichever is sooner.