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Mostly all of the jobs are in the Biology area or business area.

2007-07-30 19:14:47 · 1 answers · asked by Tegeirian2003 3 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

1 answers

If you also have a MS in stats, I see no advantage in doing a MS in biostats. You can break into the biostats field with a MS in stats just fine. If need be, you might want to volunteer/intern/work on an epidemiology project first so that you can tout experience doing biostat/epi. But otherwise, if you understand data analysis and its applications, you can do the biostats work without a biostats degree. And if you don't understand how to analyze bio/health/medical data, you may want to audit one class on biostats. That's all you really need.

If you know how to program SAS, you're already highly-marketable and should be able to command a lot of pay.

2007-07-31 05:37:49 · answer #1 · answered by Gumdrop Girl 7 · 0 0

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