4th IME Summer Conference, June 2017 Building on the success of three previous conferences held in Edinburgh, Newcastle and London, the 4th Institute of Medical Ethics (IME) Summer Conference will take place on the 15th and 16th of June in Liverpool. Two changes have been made to the conference format for 2017. First, the Research Committee […]
Month: December 2016
Film Review: Dear Zindagi
Julia Roberts meets Sigmund Freud in Goa: A review of Dear Zindagi, directed by Gauri Shinde, India 2016, 4* Currently in general release in UK cinemas Reviewed by Dr Khalid Ali, Screening room editor Bollywood cinema has secured its international box-office appeal with a well known formula of combining action, melodrama, song, and dance in […]
Global Humanities: Talking Taboo
When Talking is Taboo by Ayesha Ahmad In this piece, I want to talk about what it was like to be a panellist at a recent event strategically entitled “Talking Taboo” at the School of Oriental and African Studies. I spoke for ten minutes; ten minutes that represented a life time. I began the introduction […]
Politics and Medicine
Clinicians should understand how they can use the ballot box to advance their patients’ health interests. Jacob King, Deniz Kaya Medical Students, Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry As a health professional working in a sterile environment one might easily find themselves feeling disparately removed from the slimy world of politics. But sadly we […]
Global Humanities: On Being Invisible
Ines Ongenda – A Personal Reflection In September 2015 I started a Master of Science in Global Health and Development at a leading UK institution. My background was in biological sciences and I was your typical aspiring medical doctor who had a strong interest in global health and wanted to explore and learn […]
Film review: Mannequin
The Banality of Evil – Review of Mannequin, Egypt, 2015, directed by Dr Mina Elnaggar Reviewed by Professor Robert Abrams, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York Mannequin is a short, terrifying film with ambitions as large as its 7-minute running time is brief. The action starts immediately: An unnamed man who must […]
Book Review: A Smell of Burning
A Smell of Burning By Colin Grant London: Jonathan Cape, 2016 Reviewed by Dr Maria Vaccarella, University of Bristol Colin Grant’s A Smell of Burning conveys a powerful message: being diagnosed with epilepsy means being associated with an intricate and captivating cultural history. Patients and families are connected to centuries of […]