Diversity Hub
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UC San Francisco is one of 22 universities with Institutional Research and Career Development Award (IRACDA) programs funded by NIH/NIGMS. IRACDA Scholars receive mentored research and teaching training at major research institutions partnered with a teaching-intensive institution with a demonstrated commitment to outreach. UCSF's partner is San Francisco State University.
UCSF Learners Open to All Underrepresented Minorities
LGBT First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Academic Outreach Research Community Building Education/Training Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Anne Sufka
Email address
Phone
415-514-9434
Website
Deadline
1-Apr-18
Duration
IRACDA Scholars participate in this 4-year career development program in which Scholars appoint to the program in August-October of their first year of postdoctoral training.
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
UCSF Mission Bay
The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) Training Program offers a summer clinical research training program for up to 15-20 undergraduate students, who are planning to attend dental, medical, nursing, pharmacy or physical therapy professional schools after graduation, and who have an interest in a career in clinical research. Students will be paired with a UCSF professional student who is enrolled in the Designing Clinical Research (DCR) course. The purpose of the course is to train students to evaluate the medical literature, to design clinical and translational research studies, and to encourage long-term collaborations between UCSF and undergraduate students.
Undergrad Underrepresented Minorities LGBT
First Generation to College People with Disabilities Academic Research Education/Training Mentorship CTSI
For more information contact us:
Contact
Christian Leiva
Email address
Phone
415-514-8141
Deadline
Feb 28, 2018; usually at the end of February
Duration
The last week of July and all of August
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
PRIME hosts 4-5 health pipeline organizations to come and visit the UCSF campus during the summer. We have current partners that we invite, Mentoring in Medicine and Science, Huckleberry Youth Wellness Academy, San Francisco State Summer Science Institute, FACES for the Future. PRIME students work with the coordinators of the pipeline programs to develop a site visit that is in line with the interests of their programs. Some typical activities include a tour, a medical student panel, specimen/organ hands-on activity. Each program visits UCSF once for about 3 hours.
K-12 Community Members Underrepresented Minorities
First Generation to College Academic Outreach Community Building Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Aisha Queen -Johnson
Email address
Phone
415 307-4077
Website
Duration
Summer Annually
Location
UCSF Parnassus
The Visiting Scholars Program (VSP) is a funded program designed to give students with a diverse background a chance to experience the training that the University of Washington Department of Medicine has to offer. Students will spend four weeks on an internal medicine elective at the University of Washington Medical Center or Harborview Medical Center and care for a variety of patients in our tertiary care centers. Near the completion of the elective students will be offered an opportunity to interview with the internal medicine residency program. Accepted applicants will receive funding for their travel and lodging expenses.
UCSF Learners People with Disabilities Underrepresented Minorities
Academic Education/Training Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Kathi Sleavin
Email address
Phone
206-543-7430
Deadline
May 1st. Rolling thereafter.
Duration
Summer through Fall quarters annually.
Participation
Application
Location
National
PITCH is a FREE opportunity for incoming high school juniors, particularly those who may be the first in their families to pursue a four-year college degree, to spend three weeks at UCSF, exploring careers in healthcare, and looking into the educational pathways that lead to different careers, and learning professional skills that will help them along the way. PITCH students are mentored by current UCSF students in the Graduate Division, dental school, pharmacy school, medical school, and nursing school as they complete a group research project and receive one-on-one and small group academic advising from EAOP counselors. PITCH has three core components: (1) Exposure to Careers in Health - presented through a combination of hands-on workshops or guest lectures, led by UCSF students, faculty and staff; (2) College Awareness - Assists students to better understanding the college search and application process; and (3) Group Work on a Research Project - PITCH students research a specific disease, which allows them to develop an understanding for the roles of the various health professionals treating the disease.
K-12 Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
Outreach Research Community Building Conference/Symposium Education/Training Mentorship Office of Diversity & Outreach
For more information contact us:
Deadline
Friday, April 30th, 2021
Duration
July 12 - 30, 2021
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
The UCSF Center for Vulnerable Populations at San Francisco General Hospital carries out innovative research to prevent and treat chronic disease in populations for whom social conditions often conspire to both promote various chronic diseases and make their management more challenging. Founded in 2006, the CVP is based within the UCSF Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine and is located on the campus of San Francisco General Hospital. Beyond the local communities it serves, CVP is nationally and internationally known for its research in health communication and health policy to reduce health disparities, with special expertise in the social determinants of health, including literacy, food policy, poverty, and minority status, with a focus on the clinical conditions of pre-diabetes, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.
UCSF Learners UCSF Faculty Undergrad
Open to the Public Open to All Underrepresented Minorities LGBT First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Research Volunteer Conference/Symposium Education/Training UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Purba Chatterjee
Email address
Phone
415-206-5277
Website
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF SFGH
The UC Davis - UC Merced San Joaquin Valley Program in Medical Education (SJV PRIME) is an innovative approach to training future physicians, a pathway that will emphasize quality of care anchored in community-based research and educational experiences. The diversity of the San Joaquin Valley, including health systems, diverse patient populations and broad community partnerships, is a core component of the effort to improve the health and health care of the region. The SJV PRIME program is a collaboration between the UC Davis School of Medicine, UC Merced and UCSF Fresno, to train the next generation of San Joaquin Valley physicians. It seeks to increase the diversity of the medical profession and remedy the uneven distribution of physicians in California. SJV PRIME is a tailored clinical track at the UC Davis School of Medicine for medical students who are committed to ensuring high quality, diverse and well distributed medical care to improve health for populations, communities, and individuals in California's San Joaquin Valley.
Undergrad Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
Outreach Research Service Learning Certificate/Degree Program Education/Training Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Grace Carlson
Email address
Phone
559-499-6527
Participation
Application
Location
California
The intensive one-day program provides 9th and 10th grade Latino high school students with the tools and training necessary to prepare for college. The program is held on various college campuses across the country in cities with a high Latino population.
K-12 Underrepresented Minorities Outreach
Service Learning
For more information contact us:
Duration
1 Day
Participation
RSVP
Location
National
SUHLA is a summer academy for rising 11th graders participating in the FACES for the Future-SF program at the O'Connell High School Health & Science Lab. SUHLA participants will learn key concepts of community health, social justice, advocacy, and social determinants of health through the lens of health and human rights, especially as it relates to the SF Mission District. We are recruiting graduate students in the fields of dentistry, medicine, nursing and pharmacy as SUHLA Fellows. The SUHLA Fellowship is a total of 6 weeks during the summer. This begins with a primer session before the summer academy, where Fellows receive training in teaching skills, small group facilitation, program implementation/evaluation, and community assessment. The Fellowship is followed by the 3 week academy in which the Fellows will take on an instructive role and facilitate the curricular sessions. This will largely take place at SFGH with some sessions at other UCSF-associated campuses. The Academy will culminate in with SFGH Family Health Center community fair, at which academy HS participants will present to their community highlighting health topics.
UCSF Learners K-12 Community Members
Open to All Underrepresented Minorities LGBT First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Outreach Service Learning Community Building Education/Training Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Contact
SUHLA Team
Email address
Phone
408.803.4244
Website
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
Bay Area
UCSF Mission Bay
UCSF SFGH
In order to increase access to primary care for the underserved, the GE Foundation and National Medical Fellowships founded the Primary Care Leadership Program (PCLP) in 2012. Now entering its eighth year, PCLP provides future healthcare professionals with an opportunity to experience the challenges and rewards of primary care practice in community health centers (CHCs) across the US. This program is open to medical students and graduate-level nursing and physician assistant students who are poised to become leaders in primary care. For six weeks, PCLP Scholars will actively engage with a CHC Site Partner and PCLP mentors in leadership training, team-based project activities, and healthcare service delivery. Scholars will each receive a $5,000 scholarship stipend that is expected to cover travel, living, and lodging expenses during the service-learning experience period. Please note that program cities begin and end on different calendar dates. To learn about our program dates and duration, application deadline, clinical sites, and more, visit our website listed below or contact us via the supplied email address.
Underrepresented Minorities Service Learning Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Colleen McLellan
Email address
Phone
504-309-7380
Website
Participation
Application
Location
National