<p>Are you really looking for just a masters? You probably aren’t going to find one. Best bet is to get a PhD as most biomedical-related grad programs are PhD only (what are your potential career goals? What do you want to do with your degree)? Also, what are your research interests? I would look into Columbia’s metabolic biology ([Nutritional</a> and Metabolic Biology](<a href=“http://www.columbia.edu/cu/gsas/departments/nutrition/department.html]Nutritional”>http://www.columbia.edu/cu/gsas/departments/nutrition/department.html)), University of Chicago is really good at endo ([The</a> Biomedical Sciences Cluster | The University of Chicago](<a href=“Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences – at the University of Chicago”>Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences – at the University of Chicago)), Berkeley ([UC</a> Berkeley Nutritional Science & Toxicology - Home](<a href=“http://nutrition.berkeley.edu/]UC”>http://nutrition.berkeley.edu/)), Wisconsin ([Endocrinology</a> and Reproductive Physiology Graduate Program, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health](<a href=“http://www.med.wisc.edu/education/graduate-programs/endocrinology-and-reproduction-physiology-graduate-program/770]Endocrinology”>http://www.med.wisc.edu/education/graduate-programs/endocrinology-and-reproduction-physiology-graduate-program/770))… If you are nutritional-endo. interested, Tufts has some good programs. Other umbrella biomedical phds have endo. tracks (like UCSD), plus schools like Harvard, Yale, Penn, UCSF, UT-Southwestern, etc. have good metabolic/endo. research, but don’t have endocrinology programs per se (just umbrella programs that you would create your own path)…</p>