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Currently Serving Board Members

Jay McGehee - Bereavement Co-facilitator
Hospice Volunteer Caregiver
Board Member since 2004

Harriet Posthuma - MSMT, RN
Music Therapist, Registered Nurse
Board Member since 2004

Greg Schneider - Founder
CEO & Executive Director
Hospice Volunteer Caregiver, Harpist
Board Member since 2004

Jay McGehee, Director, Bereavement Co-facilitator

Jay has been a caregiver to terminally-ill people as a hospice volunteer for over 10 years. He began this caregiving journey at Laguna Honda in San Francisco. He later joined the Zen Hospice Project, where he volunteered at the Guest House residence in San Francisco.

Currently he volunteers at the Center for Attitudinal Healing. His focus at the Center is the Children's Program which helps children who have lost a parent or sibling. The Children's Program includes both "Living with Illness" and "Bereavement" group meetings, at which he is a co-facilitator.

Jay earned his electrical Journeyman from the IBEW and a California state contractor license while working as an electrician for 11 years. His current profession for the last 12 years has been computer programming.


Harriet Posthuma, Director, MSMT, RN

Harriet Posthuma has been involved with hospice since 1989. She began as a caregiver volunteer to terminally-ill residents at the Zen Hospice Project's Guest House residential hospice in San Francisco where she served for about 2 years. In 1991 she was asked to become Residence Manager & Volunteer Coordinator for this hospice and did so until 1998. She managed all activities related to the operation of the hospice residence and was responsible for recruiting and training the volunteers.

Harriet also managed the Volunteer Program for Visiting Nurses and Hospice (VNH) of San Francisco from 1999 to 2003. She supervised and trained about 100 volunteers in sensitive patient care situations involving intense health and emotional issues related to death and dying. She was responsible for placing volunteers to provide culturally sensitive services to a diverse patient population with cancer, HIV and other life-threatening illnesses. In her administrative function she also was responsible for maintaining federal and state regulations relating to the provision of volunteer services.

In addition to Harriet's managerial role, she also served as a caregiver to the dying in VNH's Coming Home Hospice, a 15-bed residential hospice, as well as in homes of the dying.

Harriet earned a Master's degree in Music Therapy from the Middeloo Institute in Amersfoot, The Netherlands in 1978. As part of her education in Music Therapy she was a music therapist for children in a psychiatric institution and also for emotionally disturbed children.

In 1985 she completed a 2-year program of study leading to professional playing and teaching of the classical recorder at The Conservatory of Music, Utrecht, The Netherlands. In 1988 she completed a 6-month Residential Program in Human Development at the Nyingma Institute in Berkeley, CA.

Harriet is currently enrolled in the Associate Degree Nursing program at Santa Rosa Junior College.


Greg Schneider, Founder, CEO & Executive Director
  Greg Schneider
 
Greg Schneider
HEAL Project
Founding Director

Greg Schneider, CEO, Executive Director and Founder of the HEAL Project, has been directly involved with hospice as a volunteer caregiver at the bedside of the dying since 1996. His experience has given him the insight to see that compassionate care starts with first intimately knowing ourselves and then having a good understanding of the nature of the dying person's journey. From there the uncertainties can be minimized, allowing us to give care in a more tender and loving manner.

Greg has served as a volunteer caregiver with numerous hospices in Northern California since 1996. He has served at the Zen Hospice Project and the George Mark Children's House in the San Francisco Bay Area. He presently volunteers with Memorial Hospice, Hospice of Petaluma, Heartland Hospice and Sutter VNA in Sonoma County in Northern California. He serves at the bedside and plays the harp for his patients and for various hospice-related events. He is a counselor for the Hospice of Petaluma’s bereavement group for children who have lost a parent as well as for the Children’s Cancer Community support group, which supports families whose children have cancer.

In 2008 Greg established the Hospice Community Forum (HCF), which is a rapidly growing venue for the entire hospice community to network on critical issues relating to the important work that the community does as well as stimulating professional growth through better communication.

The HEAL Project plans to offer its first courses for the Hospice Volunteer Training Institute (HVTI), an online training program for hospice volunteers and managers, in the Fall of 2009 in conjunction with its pediatric volunteer program called Hannah's Friends. It is the goal of the HEAL Project to make HVTI a vehicle for change that will allow our society to harvest and retain more compassionate caregivers from our communities. Through academic and experiential contributions from the hospice community at large, we are developing a broad curriculum of courses that will raise hospice volunteer education to new heights.

Greg was selected by Johns Hopkins University to be a member of the Interdisciplinary Palliative Care Delegation to China and Tibet in October 2006. The goal of this delegation was to understand how medical care was practiced in China and Tibet, both traditional and western approaches, and to see how these countries had developed their palliative and end-of-life care services.

In 2005 Greg founded the Hospice Volunteer Association (HVA), which is now the world’s leading association for Hospice Volunteers and Managers. HVA was created with the goal of Encouraging Excellence in Hospice Volunteering Through Education and Communication. Since its inception, HVA has introduced several new, innovative and unique services that benefit the hospice community such as the National Hospice Document Repository and the Patient Data Vault.

In January of 2003 Greg began authoring and publishing the HEAL Project online Information Letter Series as a public service to educate the general public about hospice and to promote more public dialogue on death and dying issues. This program is part of the HEAL Project's Community Outreach Program in Education (COPE). The program has been well received by the public and by hospice organizations in the U.S. and abroad.

In early 2003 he began development of the HEAL Project's Hannah's Friends program, which provides experienced hospice volunteers to support families who have a child with a life-threatening illness. The program's volunteers are available to support families in numerous ways: in their homes, hospitals and in residential hospice facilities. Their primary purpose is to support and guide families through this most difficult time when their child is dying and then to support them beyond their loss. The pilot program for Hannah’s Friends is ongoing in Sonoma County of Northern California.

Greg has been a guest on Grace Cathedral's LightWorks TV program (KRON-TV Ch4 San Francisco) to discuss the role of the hospice volunteer and the importance of hospice to the community. He also was the featured guest on San Francisco's KGO radio talk show to discuss hospice and the differences between curative and palliative care as well as answering questions from the show host and KGO listeners.

He often plays the harp for hospice patients in addition to sitting with them at the bedside, and also lectures and conducts workshops for local schools in the San Francisco Bay Area, teaching students about grief, loss and other issues related to death and dying.

Greg has a Master's degree in Electrical Engineering (EE) from the University of Santa Clara and a Bachelor's degree in EE from San Jose State University. He previously founded and managed a successful technical consulting business that served high-tech companies in the San Francisco Bay Area for over 30 years.


Black and white photos on this page are copyrighted by A. Raja Hornstein. Photos were taken for the Zen Hospice Project at Laguna Honda Hospital Hospice Unit and the Zen Hospice Guest House, a residential hospice facility. For more information on Zen Hospice, please visit www.zenhospice.org.

© copyright 2008 HEAL Project. All rights reserved.