G**********N 发帖数: 63 | 1 Location: (Shanghai, China P.R.)
Company: (www.ppdi.com)
Position: (SAS programmer, Sr. SAS programmer)
Contact info: (B********[email protected])
Major Required: (Mathematics, Statistics, Physics, etc.)
Base Salary: 8000 - 25000 RMB/Month based on experience [Before tax].
Essential Responsibilities
1. Develop SAS programs to produce data listings and Case Report Form
Tabulations (CRT);
2. Build standard tabulation datasets;
3. Create derived or analysis datasets;
4. Develop SAS programs to implement statistical analyses to generate
tables, listings and figures as specified in the statistical analysis plans;
5. Perform validation of and quality assurance aspects of all SAS
programming activities;
6. Develops SAS programs for other needs;
7. Consults on other statistical programming tasks, such as support for CRF
design, database development, data validation plan and blinded data review.
Qualifications/Requirements:
1. Excellent English communication skills, can work independently with
native English speaker;
2. Must have proficient SAS or Oracle SQL programming skills;
3. Must possess great interpersonal capabilities and can work with people
from different cultures;
4. Have ability to construct good relationship within a team environment;
5. Must have a master degrees;
6. Knowing drug development procedures and FDA/SFDA regulations is a plus.
7. Must have one year relevant industrial experience. | s*****9 发帖数: 285 | 2 try to make d remote position available. | y*****w 发帖数: 1350 | 3 When reading such statistical position opportunities from China-based pharma
CRO's or big pharma branches in China, I always have a question in mind --
why can't these positions be offshored back to the US, with the target
candidates being those statisticians/programmers of Chinese origin that have
a full-time job in the US but have time and energy to take a telecommute,
part-time stats-related job, as far as overseas studying/working experience
is preferred? As long as such positions don't have an absolute requirement
for the employee to sit in the office in Beijing or Shanghai to deal with
pharma regulations in China or have face-to-face communications with
investigators and government agencies in China, I don't see why these
positions need to be physically in China. Cost of labor wise, if they are
offshored back to the US as part-time telecommute jobs, candidates with
years of experience usually don't ask for any benefits as they already got
those benefits from their full-time job, and prtty much they are satisfied
with a payment of US$ 1,500 per month; whereas in China, current market
price is at least 10,000-15,000 RMB plus benefits per month for a fresh
graduate with a Master's degree obtained in the US. And, work efficienty
wise, in the statistical field a part-time position in the US is sort of
equivalent to a full-time position in China.
I understand that one potential problem with this is in regard to conflict
of interest and commercial confidentiality, if one has a full-time job at a
pharma company and simultaneously a part-time job at another pharma company. | p********a 发帖数: 5352 | 4 yes, conflict of interest and commercial confidentiality are big deals. | p********a 发帖数: 5352 | 5 US$ 1,500 per month is way too low for a part time job. If you only work for
20 hours per week, that is a $20/hr job. If you earn 100K per year, you
would not consider a $20/hr part-time job.
Well, if you only earn $60K per year, you are not seasoned enough to work on
a part-time job. | y*****w 发帖数: 1350 | 6 Well, a candidate that is well qualified to take a part-time stats-related
pharma job does NOT necessarily work currently for the pharma industry
making $100,000 annually as you assumed.
for
on
【在 p********a 的大作中提到】 : US$ 1,500 per month is way too low for a part time job. If you only work for : 20 hours per week, that is a $20/hr job. If you earn 100K per year, you : would not consider a $20/hr part-time job. : Well, if you only earn $60K per year, you are not seasoned enough to work on : a part-time job.
| s*****9 发帖数: 285 | 7 100 hourly is the highest wage I've ever seen. |
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