Fellowship in Addiction Dissemination & Implementation Science – Apply by April 1!

Center for Dissemination and Implementation At Stanford (C-DIAS) Fellowship in Addiction Dissemination & Implementation (D&I) Science. Deadline April 1, 2025

Applications are now being accepted for the 2025–2026 Center for Dissemination and Implementation At Stanford (C-DIAS) Fellowship in Addiction Dissemination & Implementation (D&I) Science.

The C-DIAS Fellowship in Addiction Dissemination & Implementation (D&I) Science is for early or mid-career individuals with goals to improve public access to and quality of addiction treatment by leveraging advanced implementation science methods. 

Submit your application by April 1st, 2025.

This year-long mentored learning experience:

  • Is a one-year (Sept 2025–Sept 2026), primarily virtual fellowship, with the possibility of extending to two years. 
  • Includes three days in Half Moon Bay California (Sept 10–12, 2025) for the C-DIAS annual meeting to connect with C-DIAS Faculty, Advisory Board Members, C-DIAS Research Project PI and teams, as well as past and current C-DIAS Fellows.
  • Features a Research Track with a goal of preparation for an NIH-funded addiction implementation science  research career; and a Learning Health Systems Track to apply implementation methods for substance use as an embedded researcher or quality improvement specialist.
  • Combines didactics, experiential peer group-based learning, individual mentoring, and guidance in professional development.
  • Enables individuals to maintain their full-time employment at their home institution.

Activities include monthly, virtual, hour-long lectures; participation in the C-DIAS Research Core sections activities; C-DIAS Virtual Grand Rounds; individualized mentoring; lead authorship opportunities; and support developing an NIH grant application or proposal to solve a health systems problem.

The C-DIAS Fellowship is eligible for CME/CE credits.

C-DIAS Fellows join an expanding network of individuals engaged in addiction treatment health services and implementation research, all committed to real-world impact.

More information about the fellowship can be found on the C-DIAS website or this  flyer .