Non-Profit Program Intern (Unpaid, but school credit is available)
Description:
Responsibilities:
The Program Intern provides support for day-to-day functions of the Program Team. S/he helps to manage general clerical work such as filing, photocopying, faxing, mailings, and running errands to the main hospital campus and post office. In addition, s/he will have to opportunity to work on independent projects with room for personal input and creativity. This is a weekday position with a 10-hour per week minimum.Duties may include:
• Outreach to hospitals across the US to help ensure program compliance;
• Data entry and filing;
• Assorted research projects;
• Processing nominations for the Schwartz Center Compassionate Caregiver Award®;
• Maintaining program database and the schedule of Schwartz Center Rounds® for nearly 250 hospitals across the country.
Qualifications:
Requirements:
Mature, reliable Program Interns are critical to the success of the Schwartz Center’s program team. They must be organized, detail-oriented, and self-driven, with a strong commitment to the quality of work. Candidates should have an interest in the non-profit sector and/or healthcare, and an ability to work in a small, fast-paced, deadline driven office setting. Knowledge of Windows, Microsoft Word and Excel is required.
Paid Internship Info:
Unpaid
Hours:
10/week
Length/Availability:
Summer 2012
Start Date:
May 28, 2012
End Date:
, September 1, 2012
Deadline:
May 28, 2012Tags:
Administration Project ManagementMore Internships in Massachusetts:
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The Schwartz Center for Compassionate Healthcare
To support and advance compassionate health care in which caregivers, patients and their families relate to one another in a way that provides hope to the patient, support to caregivers and sustenance to the healing process
Shortly before his death from lung cancer at age 40 in September of 1995, Kenneth B. Schwartz, a loving husband and father and successful health care attorney in Boston, established an organization dedicated to strengthening the relationship between patients and caregivers in the changing health care system. Ken viewed the Center as a vehicle to advance the ideas, hopes, and concerns that he expressed in his article, ‘‘A Patients Story,’’ published on July 16, 1995, in the Boston Globe Magazine.
As Ken wrote in his moving article, ‘‘As skilled and knowledgeable as my caregivers are, what matters most is that they have empathized with me in a way that gives me hope and makes me feel like a human being, not just an illness.’’ Everyone who read Kens story related to it. Patients and families applauded Ken for giving voice to their fears and experiences and eloquently articulating the importance of compassion. Caregivers were reminded to stay in the moment with patients and, as Ken wrote, that the smallest acts of kindness made the unbearable bearable.’’
Kens experience was seminal. During his ten-month ordeal, he came to realize that what matters most when a medical issue arises — whether for ourselves or a loved one — is the ‘‘human connection’’ with our health care professionals.
In 2005, the Schwartz Center celebrated its tenth anniversary. Ken could not have imagined the breadth of support accorded the Center in its short history. The Center seeks to sustain Kens vision of a more compassionate health care system, and has become a catalyst for change in health care, creating pioneering programs that teach caregivers to combine science with humanity and take pride in the ability to show compassion.
The Schwartz Center for Compassionate Healthcare [ All of our Internships ]
205 Portland St
Boston, MA
Phone: (617) 724-4746
Email: hlolson@partners.org
Website: The Schwartz Center for Compassionate Healthcare
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