Medical Humanities Podcast

Informações:

Sinopsis

Medical Humanities is a leading international journal that reflects the whole field of medical humanities. Medical Humanities aims to encourage a high academic standard for this evolving and developing subject and to enhance professional and public discussion. It features original articles relevant to the delivery of healthcare, the formulation of public health policy, the experience of being ill and of caring for those who are ill, as well as case conferences, educational case studies, book, film, and art reviews, editorials, correspondence, news and notes. To ensure international relevance Medical Humanities has Editorial Board members from all around the world.http://mh.bmj.com/

Episodios

  • Bringing cinema to those with visual impairment, reporting from the Panorama of the European Film

    21/12/2015 Duración: 12min

    The president of The Panorama of the European Film, Marianne Khoury, explores the new possibilities opened by the last edition of the festival in Cairo, including the new technologies allowing cinema for those with visual impairment. The film-maker introduced the event in Egypt more than a decade ago, presenting alternative cinema to the country. In this podcast, Marianne Khoury tells Khalid Ali about the other films in this festival, including her own 'Shadows-Zelal', which explores the dark reality of Egypt’s mental asylums. See the full program of The Panorama of the European Film at http://panoramaeurofilm.com/

  • Psychological coercion in UK government workfare programmes

    15/05/2015 Duración: 11min

    How is positive psychology being used as a coercive strategy in UK government workfare programmes? What effect does this have on the people who receive unemployment benefits, and how have psychologists responded? In this podcast, Lynne Friedli (Hubbub) and Robert Stearn (Birkbeck) discuss their research with BMJ Medical Humanities Associate Editor Angela Woods. “Positive affect as coercive strategy: conditionality, activation and the role of psychology in UK government workfare programmes” appears in “Critical Medical Humanities,” the first special issue of Medical Humanities mh.bmj.com.

  • Mohamed Khan, Egyptian screenwriter and director, on what clinicians can gain from his films

    23/10/2014 Duración: 10min

    Khalid Ali, screening room editor at Medical Humanities, talks to Mohamed Khan, screen writer and actor, and one of the leading directors of of neo-realist cinema in 80s Egypt. They discuss his range of films and the parallels with, and lessons for, practicing medicine.

  • The Postgraduate Medical Humanities Conference 2014: The mad scientist

    15/09/2014 Duración: 07min

    Khalid Ali, Screening Room editor, reports from the Postgraduate Medical Humanities Conference in Exeter. Here he speaks to Laura Habbe, a PhD student at Trinity College Dublin. Her research focuses around the figure of the mad scientist, often taking the shape of a doctor, in popular fiction of the last two decades of the nineteenth century. She is interested in the question of how the mad scientist became firmly established as a stereotype in our culture and how this relates to questions of science communication and the public understanding of science.

  • The Postgraduate Medical Humanities Conference 2014

    15/09/2014 Duración: 10min

    Khalid Ali, Screening Room editor, reports from the Postgraduate Medical Humanities Conference in Exeter. Here he talks with Sarah Jones, a final year PhD student affiliated with the Centre for Medical History at the University of Exeter. Her thesis, which looks at free love and sex radicalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, is funded by Great Western Research and supervised by Professor Kate Fisher. She co-organised the new annual Postgraduate Medical Humanities Conference, and is also co-editor of the Postgraduate Journal of Medical Humanities (the first edition of which will be released this Autumn) alongside Jess Monaghan.

  • The Postgraduate Medical Humanities Conference 2014: Education and medical humanities

    15/09/2014 Duración: 09min

    Khalid Ali, Screening Room editor, reports from the Postgraduate Medical Humanities Conference in Exeter. Here he speaks to James Fallon, a specialist registrar in General Adult Psychiatry working in Brighton, about medical education and medical humanities, in particular how the two can be used together to improve training.

  • Welcome to Medical Humanities

    14/04/2014 Duración: 21min

    In this first podcast from the journal Medical Humanities, editor Deborah Bowman introduces members of her new editorial team: editor of The Screening Room, Khalid Ali, and editor of The Reading Room, Georgia Belam. Together they discusses the vision for the journal. It is an exciting time for Medical Humanities, and the creation of The Reading Room and The Screening Room represent the first stage in a process of developing and refreshing the journal, its blog and social media. You can read some of the contributions we have already received for The Screening Room on the Medical Humanities blog: http://blogs.bmj.com/medical-humanities/. Watch out for more posts in the coming months. The first copy of the journal to feature The Reading Room and The Screening Room will be the December 2014 issue. The sections in the journal will be more editorially-led and include commissioned essays from scholars, writers and producers. You'll be able to read long-form and thematic reviews, as well as analyses and empirical

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