Diversity Hub
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Related Programs (61):
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
The mission of DIVA is to create a welcoming, inclusive, and respectful community for students, faculty, and staff in the School of Nursing. DIVA embraces the "big umbrella" of diversity to include human diversity in its many forms: gender, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, physical ability, socioeconomic status, age, and spiritual and political beliefs, among others. To this end, DIVA focuses on addressing issues related to bias, stereotyping, prejudicial attitudes, and exclusionary practices in order to create a welcoming environment with a particular focus on underrepresented faculty, students, and staff.
UCSF Learners UCSF Staff UCSF Faculty
Open to All Committee Community Building Education/Training Mentorship Outreach UCSF Nursing
For more information contact us:
Contact
Teresa Scherzer
Email address
Phone
(415) 514-3498
Participation
Open Invitation
Location
UCSF Mission Bay
UCSF Mt. Zion
UCSF Parnassus
UCSF SFGH
UCSF Advocates is the community of our students, faculty, staff, alumni and supporters who stand up for values and policies that are fundamental to UCSF's mission of advancing health worldwide. We mobilize our community to stand up and speak out to help shape local, state, and federal policies that promote and protect our core missions of healthcare, scientific research and education. We educate people about the issues that impact out work and our community. Join us to learn more about opportunities to connect with lawmakers, engage in policy change, sign up for advocacy trainings, participate in advocacy events, and more.
UCSF Learners UCSF Staff UCSF Faculty
Open to All Community Building Education/Training Outreach Service Learning
For more information contact us:
Contact
Allie Jones
Email address
Phone
415-476-8546
Participation
Open Invitation
Location
UCSF Laurel Heights
UCSF Mission Bay
UCSF Mt. Zion
UCSF Parnassus
UCSF SFGH
San Francisco
Bay Area
California
National
International
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
Each June, the Early Academic Outreach Program supports UCSF students in holding a one-week free summer day camp at the Parnassus campus for rising fifth- and sixth-grade students. Summer Science Camp was established by UCSF School of Pharmacy student Heather Hertema in 2007 to excite, motivate, and inspire youth, especially those who are underrepresented and underserved in natural and health sciences to pursue the natural and health sciences both in college and as a career. Each year, the camp affords up to 55 students the opportunity to experience hands-on, inquiry-based science. The camp also promotes positive interaction with professional students, campus scientists, and health professionals who serve as role models.
K-12 Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
Academic Outreach Research Community Building Education/Training Mentorship UCSF Pharmacy
For more information contact us:
Contact
Don Woodson
Email address
Deadline
Mid May
Duration
One week in June
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
The UCSF School of Medicine offers a comprehensive, structured post baccalaureate graduate certificate program designed for individuals who have been unsuccessful in gaining admission to medical school or who have completed the required undergraduate course work but feel they need more background before initiating the medical school application process. We are interested in individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds or underserved communities. The UCSF program is designed to help individuals increase their chances of gaining admission to medical school by offering intensive MCAT review, assistance with medical school application preparation, science courses at UC Berkeley Extension, seminars on health care issues in underserved communities, and academic skills workshops.
Undergrad Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
Academic Certificate/Degree Program Education/Training UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Alma Martinez
Email address
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
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 Health Careers Opportunity Program is a partnership between the University of California, San Francisco Fresno Latino Center for Medical Education and Research and California State University Fresno (Fresno State) to provide support to disadvantaged Fresno State students committed to becoming competitive applicants to health professional schools. Selected students engage in a structured program of academic enrichment and social support, preparing them for admission into health professional school. The ultimate goal is for these individuals to become healthcare professionals that will practice in the Central Valley, providing care to the medically underserved.
Undergrad Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
Academic Outreach Volunteer Community Building Conference/Symposium Education/Training Informational Session Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Bertha Dominguez
Email address
Participation
Application
Location
California
MedLink is a partnership between UCSF medical students, SFUSD, OUSD and community organizations. Our mission is to inspire and support high school students from communities that are under-represented in the health professions through mentorship and hands-on activities in the health sciences. We envision a future in which healthcare workers come from backgrounds that are as ethnically and economically diverse as the communities they serve.
K-12 Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
Academic Outreach Mentorship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Valerie Margol,MD
Email address
Phone
415-502-1646
Deadline
Fall each year
Duration
November-April each year
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
Promoting Underrepresented Minorities Advancing in the Sciences (PUMAS) is a paid biomedical research internship program funded by an NIH/NHLBI grant. PUMAS aims to identify community college students from disadvantaged background who currently live in the Bay Area. During the program, PUMAS interns are paired with a scientific mentor and work on an individual research project in one of our laboratories. PUMAS interns work part-time (20–25 hours per week) over the course of 8-weeks and participate in a final poster session where they present their research findings to the scientific community here at Gladstone and UCSF.
Undergrad Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
People with Disabilities Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Email address
Deadline
Friday, March 12, 2021
Duration
Thursday, July 1, 2021, to Friday, September 10, 2021
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Mission Bay