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The Center for Immigrant Health (CIH) at New York University School of Medicine attracts a dynamic and diverse workforce. We welcome new talent and energy for the various roles and projects at the Center. If you would like to work on challenging, interesting projects, and have a significant public health impact, the Center provides the right environment. We also welcome interns and volunteers to contribute to the various projects. CIH offers a variety of opportunities for high school, undergraduate, and graduate students to participate in agency activities as volunteers or interns. CIH internships offer exciting exposure and insight into the field of public health as it relates to the health of immigrant populations.
Community Tuberculosos Prevention Program (CTPP) We are looking for an enthusiastic candidate whose background and experience will best fit the Community Tuberculosis Prevention Program's mission to fight TB infection in New York City's foreign-born population. CTPP conducts education, screening, referral, and case management of persons needing INH-prophylaxis in immigrant communities with high TB infection rates. The Center for Immigrant Health (CIH) offers outreach and TB education in partnership with community-based organizations through English as Second Language classes, churches, job-training programs, and other community sites. Tuberculosis skin test positive clients are linked with New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene clinics for chest x-ray, medical examinations and treatment for latent TB infection (LTBI) when indicated. Persons on treatment for latent TB infection receive intensive case management. Requirements: Responsibilities: Salary based on experience Please submit resume with cover letter to: CTPP
Internship/Volunteer Qualifications Salary
and benefits Language Initiatives Opportunities The CIH is conducting a cost effectiveness and satisfaction study and an error analysis of its Remote Simultaneous Medical Interpretation (RSMI) Demonstration Project. Primary care physicians, nurses, and other practitioners have traditionally relied on the services of various ad-hoc interpreters who are physically present to eliminate languages barriers to effective health care. RSMI utilizes the services of trained interpreters who are remotely located and linked to the clinician through state-of-the art communication technology. The CIH has established the RSMI demonstration project at Gouverneur Hospital to demonstrate its cost effectiveness and qualitative advantages relative to traditional proximate-consecutive medical interpreting practice. The CIH is looking for experienced transcribers and translators for this study. Qualifications
Sought: Candidates
interested in the Language Initiatives positions should submit their
cover letters and resumes to Javier Gonzalez, project director, at gonzac05@med.nyu.edu Seeking linguists, researchers, students, teachers, web designers and/or technical writers who are bilingual in both English and either Bengali, Bosnian/Serbo-Croatian, Chinese (ability to write Chinese and familiarity with software required), Khmer, Kru-Bassa, Kpelle, Mende, Russian, Spanish, Temne, or Vietnamese to intern or volunteer at the Center for Immigrant Health's (CIH) Language Initiatives Program (NYU School of Medicine). Our
goal at the Center for Immigrant Health's Language Initiatives Program
is to increase immigrant access to health care by working to overcome
language barriers in the medical setting. Our work includes developing
curricula for training classes, translating medical documents, and teaching
medical interpretation. This summer, we'll also be starting a project
to use Census data to do a linguistic mapping of New York's population.
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