Diversity Hub
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Related Programs (54):
The Child Life Department at the UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital offers practicum and internship programs to students interested in the field of child life and child development careers. The Child Life Internship Program is open to students considering careers in the child life profession. Students must have completed significant academic work in child development or child life studies in a bachelor or master degree program. Students also must have documented experience working or volunteering with children in a hospital under supervision of a child life specialist (minimum of 100 hours). This is a 15-week internship with two full rotations in different units and one week in pediatric prepare program working with a certified child life specialist (CCLS). A primary supervisor, assigned to each intern, will meet with you once a week to discuss goals, journal entries, his or her case study, and specific rotations and interventions. During your internship, you will focus on therapeutic play and child development in our programming spaces. Interns also work at bedside with a CCLS in preparation, procedural support and charting. The Child Life Practicum Program is open to college students enrolled in child development courses. This is a 12-week program that offers child development students the opportunity to interact with children in our playroom. Students are offered several learning opportunities to better understand the impact of hospitalization on child development.
Undergrad Open to All Education/Training
For more information contact us:
Contact
Eileen McCree
Email address
Phone
415-476-8504
Deadline
Child life internship: Spring Semester - September 5; Summer Semester - January 5 ; Fall Semester - May 5; Child life practicum: December 5 (for Spring semester) and August 5 (for Fall semester)
Duration
Child Life Internship: Spring, Summer, and Fall semesters; Child life practicum: Spring and Fall semesters.
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Mission Bay
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
AAWD at UCSF (a Registered Campus Organization; RCO) is formed to foster women in dental careers. Our goal is to connect our members through social events, outreach and community service, lunchtime education, and networking events with established women dental professionals. AAWD inspires students to assume leadership roles in everyday lives and communities.
UCSF Learners Female Outreach
Education/Training UCSF Dentistry
For more information contact us:
Participation
Open Invitation
Location
UCSF Parnassus
The Asian Pacific American Medical Students Association (APAMSA) is a national organization of medical and pre-medical students committed to addressing the unique health challenges of Asian and Pacific Islander American (APIA) communities. APAMSA serves as a forum for student leaders to engage these health issues and develop initiatives and projects addressing those needs. The local, regional, and national activities of APAMSA aim to promote the health of the APIA community and help healthcare workers understand how to care for APIA patients in a culturally sensitive manner. Finally, APAMSA provides an important venue for medical students to meet, exchange experiences, and develop personally and professionally through leadership and service.
UCSF Learners UCSF Staff Open to All
Outreach Community Building Education/Training UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Email address
Website
Participation
Open Invitation
Location
UCSF Parnassus
Women in Life Sciences (WILS) is an organization run by UCSF trainees, that is dedicated to supporting women graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, faculty and staff at UCSF by organizing networking, mentoring, and career-building activities. Men and women are both welcome to attend all meetings and events.
UCSF Learners UCSF Staff UCSF Faculty
Female Outreach Community Building Education/Training Interprofessional
For more information contact us:
Email address
Participation
Open Invitation
Location
UCSF Parnassus
The purpose of the Minority Training Program in Cancer Control Research (MTPCCR) is to increase ethnic diversity in the field of cancer control research by encouraging minority students in master's level health programs as well as master's trained health professionals to pursue a doctoral degree and a career in research. The program has been designed to enhance participants'; (1) Understanding of the power of research to effect change; (2) Awareness of the strengths and limitations of research methods, theory, and interventions in eliminating health disparities; (3) Interest in cancer control research, from surveillance to epidemiology, individual behavior change, health services, and policy research; and (4) Research, networking, information seeking skills, and motivation and ability to successfully apply to a doctoral program.
UCSF Learners Undergrad Open to the Public
Underrepresented Minorities LGBT Research Education/Training Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Vanessa Mercado
Email address
Phone
415-514-9409
Website
Deadline
February (yearly deadline)
Duration
June
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Mission Bay
The Summer Research Program provides research opportunities in the biomedical and biological sciences. Students selected for summer research at UC San Francisco spend up to ten weeks working with UCSF faculty members on research projects. Participants in the program take part in seminars, lectures, and social events, creating a cohesive and supportive community. At the end of the program, students give presentations of their research and get valuable feedback from students, postdocs, and faculty at UCSF. Students are supported in these programs by funds from the AMGEN Scholars Program, the National Science Foundation, Genentech, the University of California Office of the President, and UCSF Graduate Division.
Undergrad Underrepresented Minorities LGBT
People with Disabilities Research Education/Training Mentorship UCSF Graduate Division
For more information contact us:
Contact
Zachary Smith
Email address
Phone
415-514-3510
Duration
Late May to End of July (10 Weeks)
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
UCSF Mission Bay
UCSF SFGH
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
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
A collaboration among faculty, residents, students, and volunteers, UCSF's Community Dental Clinic has been working to improve the health of San Francisco's homeless population for the past decade. The philosophy of the Community Dental Clinic is to motivate patients to seek healthcare and to prevent dental disease through education and preventive dentistry. CDC is guided by three mutually supportive sets of aspirations: (1) For the clients- to provide oral health education and treatment. To achieve a positive impact on the lives of our patients; (2) For the students- to create a setting in which students can learn, teach, and practice clinical skills while cultivating sensitivity and comfort in interactions with the underserved population; and (3) For the Community- To use the Dental Clinic as a forum for education and health care service. To promote advocacy for the needs of the homeless population. Ultimately, we hope this experience will broaden our vision and make us more able and compassionate health care providers for any population we choose to serve.
UCSF Learners UCSF Faculty Community Members
Open to the Public Open to All Outreach Service Learning Volunteer Community Building Education/Training UCSF Dentistry
For more information contact us:
Contact
Austen Lucena, Lori Martinez-Rubio
Email address
Phone
415-226-6021
Participation
Open Invitation
Location
UCSF Parnassus