The National Cancer Institute is accepting applications for its 2015 HCIP class
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
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Health Communications Internship Program
(HCIP)Applications for
the 2015 term are due by March 3rd.Apply online! See website for
further details: http://hcip.nci.nih.gov
The National Cancer Institute
(NCI), the largest of the 27 institutes and centers comprising the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), is the Federal Government's principal agency for
cancer research and training. The NCI coordinates the National Cancer
Program, which conducts and supports research, training, health information
dissemination, and other programs with respect to the cause, diagnosis,
prevention, and treatment of cancer, rehabilitation from cancer, and the
continuing care of cancer patients and the families of cancer patients.
The NCI recognizes that
health information dissemination is key to raising public awareness about new
cancer treatments, support for cancer patients and their families, and
prevention strategies. To that end, in 1975 the NCI established the
Health Communications Internship Program (HCIP) to attract and develop individuals interested in careers in health
communications and science writing.
The HCIP gives highly
qualified graduate students and recent graduate degree recipients the
opportunity to participate in vital health and science communications projects
in one of the many offices that make up the NCI. Interns will select an
area of emphasis: Health Communications or Science Writing.
Six-month and one-year internship terms are available.
Successful Health
Communications applicants have some science background as well as
experience and/or education in any of the following areas: public health,
epidemiology, public relations, health education, communications, science
writing, statistics, social marketing, or journalism. Health
Communications interns:
- Plan,
develop, and promote cancer education programs and materials (including
Web-based) for the public, cancer patients, or health professionals
- Gain
experience in pre-testing and evaluating cancer prevention and treatment
messages, publications, materials, and programs that reach the American
public
- Participate
in professional meetings and training seminars
Successful Science
Writing applicants have a science background with the ability to
translatecomplex scientific
conceptsintomaterialsuitable for a lay audience.Science
Writing interns:
- Write
fact sheets and press releases
- Answer
inquiries from the press
- Attend
and report on scientific meetings
- Write
feature length, creative articles on the latest, most important advances
in cancer research
- Participate
in professional meetings and training seminars
Additional information about
this program including an online application can be found by visiting http://hcip.nci.nih.gov.
If you would like hard copies of a program brochure to distribute or display,
please reply to this e-mail with your mailing address and the number of copies
you would like sent.
If you have any questions,
please do not hesitate to contact us at HCIP-Contact@mail.nih.gov.
If you are no longer the contact person for this program at your
university/organization, please let us know and provide updated
information.
Thank you for your continued
support of the NCI’s Health Communications Internship Program.
Health
Communications Internship Program
National Cancer Institute
Office of Workforce
Planning and Development
9609 Medical Center Dr. Rm 2E158 MSC 9758
Bethesda, MD 20892-9758
301-402-3509
FAX
HCIP-Contact@mail.nih.gov
http://hcip.nci.nih.gov
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