I am currently looking for a bioinformatics specialist for the lab which serves as the translational research lab for a large multi-center clinical group funded by NCI/NIH. We have been mainly working with gene expression arrays but now we are moving toward sequencing. The bioinformatics specialist has to work with our biostatistic center since they have all clinical data that needs to be linked to genomics data. We expect the person to have expertise in prognostic or predictive model building, as well as having a solid biostatistics skills such as survival analyses with censored data from clinical trials.
What would be the best way to identify such candidate?
Thanks for your help!
A good bioinformatician will have a fairly flexible toolset, and above all, be willing and able to learn new techniques. And for lots of different analysis (such as survival analysis) there may already be many different implementations available. So rather than having a whole checklist of areas where they must have expertise, look for someone well rounded who can think on their feet. Obviously someone who fits that bill that also already has lots of experience in key areas will outrank someone who doesn't.