Community Engagement and Service Learning
At NYMC, we believe that health care education should be used to both improve the lives of patients and benefit the communities we serve. Through its community involvement and service learning programs NYMC School of Medicine students have many opportunities to get involved in, and better, our local communities throughout Westchester and New York City metropolitan area.
An important part of medical education, community engagement fosters a sense of commitment, involvement, responsibility, and understanding of the communities in which your patients live, work, learn, and grow. Through your work in the community, you’ll identify issues most relevant to your patients’ lives and can develop realistic health promotion strategies to best meet the needs of your patients. By volunteering with a community service organization of your choice, you’ll develop the skills necessary to identify the social structures that influence your patients’ lives and to navigate the resources available in their communities to benefit their health and well-being. Examples of service organizations that students work with include those dedicated to health promotion, food insecurity, human rights, and domestic violence support, homeless outreach, global health, mental health and addiction support, disability assistance, and environmental needs. You have the opportunity to continue your engagement with the community during required clerkships, focused areas of concentration programs and electives.
SAAVE (Sexual Assault Abuse and Victims Empowerment)
SAAVE at NYMC offers students the opportunity to volunteer alongside trained professionals in Westchester Medical Center’s SAAVE program to provide advocacy and crisis intervention services to victims of sexual assault, domestic violence, intimate partner violence, human trafficking, and all forms of sexual misconduct.
Center for Human Rights
The NYMC Center for Human Rights (NYMCCHR) promotes health advocacy and human rights for asylum seekers in the U.S. by providing pro-bono forensic medical evaluations conducted by students who received special training in conjunction with the Physicians for Human Rights organization.
HOME (Homeless Outreach and Medical Education)
HOME works to reduce health care disparities by connecting and serving individuals living on the streets of Westchester County by providing preventative medical care and education, food, clothing, as well as information regarding social resources. NYMC medical, dental and graduate students are connected with the medically under-resourced in the community through direct street outreach and engagement with homeless shelters in our area.
Gold Humanism Honor Society
The Gold Humanism Honor Society (GHHS) promotes the ideals of humanism in medicine on the NYMC campus and affiliated institutions through community service (NYMC Cares Week), mentorship, and role-modeling (Solidarity Week for Compassionate Patient Care). As an exemplar organization, the NYMC School of Medicine chapter of the Gold Humanism Honor Society received an outstanding ranking for its contribution to humanism in health care during the COVID-19 pandemic from the Arnold P. Gold Foundation.
Other Community Engagement Opportunities
Below are some of the other places where SOM students have volunteered.
- Bethany A.M.E. Church Soup Kitchen
- Bethesda Baptist Church Lad’s Lunch
- Calvary Baptist Church Soup Kitchen
- Child Care Resources of Rockland / Tales For Tots
- Children’s Village
- Church of the Holy Name of Mary: Loaves and Fish
- Community Memorial Baptist Church Soup Kitchen
- Community Service Assoc/Project Family/Heavenly Start/Through Gods Hands
- Create a Smile/Serve a Meal, Salvation Army
- First Reformed Church Food Pantry/Kitchen
- GHHS - Woodfield Cottage Game Night
- GHHS Spreading Hope with Soap Campaign
- Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services
- National Council of Jewish Women
- Open Door Family Medical Center
- Wartburg Adult Care Center
- Winter Clothes Drive for the Local Homeless Shelter
Catholic Charities
Students volunteer in the Nutrition Assistance Program, with Health & Wellness, and Computer Instruction.
Food Bank for Westchester
The Food Bank for Westchester serves over 265 local hunger-relief programs throughout Westchester, including food pantries, soup kitchens, child and adult day-care centers, and shelters. The Food Bank provides 95% of all the food given to hungry families, children and seniors as cooked meals or groceries to take home.
Global Brigades NYMC chapter
It's more than just providing the medical brigade for the spring break week. It's a huge volunteer opportunity, because students are required spend the whole year fundraising and getting medications/medical supplies. They also recruit doctors and dentists, as well as prepare health education for kids. For the actual brigade itself, we treat around 700 patients in hard-to-reach places in Honduras and provide things from basic painkillers to BP medication to parasite meds to sunscreen (they often work outside all day and have major skin issues) to glasses for reading. Cases that are complex can be referred out to hospitals, and our organization also pays for all the medical care that they will need for the referral. The person running the trip this year is Kaitlin Swanson, but I'll be happy to provide more information if needed since I started the brigade second year.
Grace Church Community Center
Students volunteer in the soup kitchen, men’s homeless shelter, and housing services office.
Grasslands Homeless
Offers individuals who are homeless, shelter for the night. Also provides homeless men, women, and veterans social services, clothing and transportation. Homeless adults 18 years and older. Grasslands Homeless Shelter is a 149-bed facility providing temporary housing to men, women, and childless couples.
Hope Community Services
Students volunteer in the soup kitchen and food pantry.
Leake & Watts Services at Woodfield Cottage Detention Center
Students volunteer at the Woodfield Cottage Juvenile Detention Facility, which houses children ages 10 to 16 who have been charged with crimes and are awaiting the judicial process. Once a week groups of NYMC students spend some time with the residents of Woodfield Cottage, playing games such as charades, scattergories, and basketball. Our goal is to create an enjoyable atmosphere for the children and act as the role models they may not otherwise have.
NY Blood Center
Students organize three blood drives every year and NYMC recently won an award for blood donations to the surrounding community.
Ossining Food Pantry
The Ossining Food Pantry helps over 400 people per week. Clients include single people, couples, parents with children, senior citizens struggling to get by on Social Security, the newly unemployed, the underemployed, individuals returning to society after incarceration, veterans, the sick who cannot work and the well who cannot make ends meet under current circumstances. They can be men, women or children, young or old, new to the Ossining area or long-time residents. But all are hungry. The pantry is a very well-run organization that provides weekly household food supplies to families (with portions given depending on the family size).
Ronald McDonald House
A small group of students take the lead in organizing dates and times when other students at the school can take the opportunity to sign up to help prepare a meal for 30+ individuals at the Westchester Medical Center Ronald McDonald House. Each meal takes about 2-3 hours to prepare, after which student volunteers are responsible for cleaning up the kitchen and arranging the meal for the houseguests to help themselves. It is a very easy-going and rewarding commitment that also gives students the opportunity to meet peers in the other SOM classes.
The Osborn Retirement Community
The Osborn in Rye, New York, has been innovating and exceeding senior living expectations in Westchester County for more than 100 years. We provide independent living with an engaging lifestyle and a continuum of health services.
Westchester Science and Engineering Fair
It is a regional high school science fair hosted in Sleepy Hallow every spring, which NYMC students volunteer to judge. Volunteers specify which fields they are comfortable judging, including biochem, biology, medicine, engineering, etc.