'Ethical Issues in Medical Catastrophe: What Happened at Memorial Medical Centre after Hurricane Katrina?' Seminar
(11 April 2012)
On the 13th June at 5.15pm at St. Chad's College, Professor Anne Hudson Jones from The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) is delivering a seminar as part of the Centre for Medical Humanities Seminar Series 2011/2012.
Professor Anne Hudson Jones holds the Harris L. Kempner Chair in the Humanities in Medicine at the Institute for the Medical Humanities (IMH), is a Professor in the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health, UTMB and a Faculty member of the Graduate School for Biomedical Sciences. She has lectured and served as a consultant to colleges, medical and nursing schools throughout the world and has published widely in both humanities and biomedical journals. She has received the AMWA Harold Swanberg and President's Awards, both the AMWA and the American Osler Society McGovern Awards and the Nicholas E. Davies award from the American College of Physicians. The inaugural recipient of UTMB's Teaching Excellence in Medical Humanities Award in 2005, and again in 2006 and 2011. Her research interests include the theory and practice of literature and medicine; graduate education in medical humanities; narrative ethics; narratives of mental illness; bioethics in film; and ethical issues in medical catastrophes.
To book please contact the Centre for Medical Humanities at mail.cmh@durham.ac.uk or by telephone at 0191 334 7008. Admission is free and the event is open to all.
Further information on the Centre for Medical Humanities and our events can be found at our website http://www.durham.ac.uk/cmh and our Blog http://www.medicalhumanities.wordpress.com
'Ethical Issues in Medical Catastrophe: What Happened at Memorial Medical Centre after Hurricane Katrina?' Seminar
(11 April 2012)
On the 13th June at 5.15pm at St. Chad's College, Professor Anne Hudson Jones from The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) is delivering a seminar as part of the Centre for Medical Humanities Seminar Series 2011/2012.
Professor Anne Hudson Jones holds the Harris L. Kempner Chair in the Humanities in Medicine at the Institute for the Medical Humanities (IMH), is a Professor in the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health, UTMB and a Faculty member of the Graduate School for Biomedical Sciences. She has lectured and served as a consultant to colleges, medical and nursing schools throughout the world and has published widely in both humanities and biomedical journals. She has received the AMWA Harold Swanberg and President's Awards, both the AMWA and the American Osler Society McGovern Awards and the Nicholas E. Davies award from the American College of Physicians. The inaugural recipient of UTMB's Teaching Excellence in Medical Humanities Award in 2005, and again in 2006 and 2011. Her research interests include the theory and practice of literature and medicine; graduate education in medical humanities; narrative ethics; narratives of mental illness; bioethics in film; and ethical issues in medical catastrophes.
To book please contact the Centre for Medical Humanities at mail.cmh@durham.ac.uk or by telephone at 0191 334 7008. Admission is free and the event is open to all.
Further information on the Centre for Medical Humanities and our events can be found at our website http://www.durham.ac.uk/cmh and our Blog http://www.medicalhumanities.wordpress.com
'Ethical Issues in Medical Catastrophe: What Happened at Memorial Medical Centre after Hurricane Katrina?' Seminar
(11 April 2012)
On the 13th June at 5.15pm at St. Chad's College, Professor Anne Hudson Jones from The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) is delivering a seminar as part of the Centre for Medical Humanities Seminar Series 2011/2012.
Professor Anne Hudson Jones holds the Harris L. Kempner Chair in the Humanities in Medicine at the Institute for the Medical Humanities (IMH), is a Professor in the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health, UTMB and a Faculty member of the Graduate School for Biomedical Sciences. She has lectured and served as a consultant to colleges, medical and nursing schools throughout the world and has published widely in both humanities and biomedical journals. She has received the AMWA Harold Swanberg and President's Awards, both the AMWA and the American Osler Society McGovern Awards and the Nicholas E. Davies award from the American College of Physicians. The inaugural recipient of UTMB's Teaching Excellence in Medical Humanities Award in 2005, and again in 2006 and 2011. Her research interests include the theory and practice of literature and medicine; graduate education in medical humanities; narrative ethics; narratives of mental illness; bioethics in film; and ethical issues in medical catastrophes.
To book please contact the Centre for Medical Humanities at mail.cmh@durham.ac.uk or by telephone at 0191 334 7008. Admission is free and the event is open to all.
Further information on the Centre for Medical Humanities and our events can be found at our website http://www.durham.ac.uk/cmh and our Blog http://www.medicalhumanities.wordpress.com
'Ethical Issues in Medical Catastrophe: What Happened at Memorial Medical Centre after Hurricane Katrina?' Seminar
(11 April 2012)
On the 13th June at 5.15pm at St. Chad's College, Professor Anne Hudson Jones from The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) is delivering a seminar as part of the Centre for Medical Humanities Seminar Series 2011/2012.
Professor Anne Hudson Jones holds the Harris L. Kempner Chair in the Humanities in Medicine at the Institute for the Medical Humanities (IMH), is a Professor in the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health, UTMB and a Faculty member of the Graduate School for Biomedical Sciences. She has lectured and served as a consultant to colleges, medical and nursing schools throughout the world and has published widely in both humanities and biomedical journals. She has received the AMWA Harold Swanberg and President's Awards, both the AMWA and the American Osler Society McGovern Awards and the Nicholas E. Davies award from the American College of Physicians. The inaugural recipient of UTMB's Teaching Excellence in Medical Humanities Award in 2005, and again in 2006 and 2011. Her research interests include the theory and practice of literature and medicine; graduate education in medical humanities; narrative ethics; narratives of mental illness; bioethics in film; and ethical issues in medical catastrophes.
To book please contact the Centre for Medical Humanities at mail.cmh@durham.ac.uk or by telephone at 0191 334 7008. Admission is free and the event is open to all.
Further information on the Centre for Medical Humanities and our events can be found at our website http://www.durham.ac.uk/cmh and our Blog http://www.medicalhumanities.wordpress.com
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