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New Centre with University of Johannesburg

A new Centre for Philosophy of Epidemiology, Medicine, and Public Health (CPEMPH) has been launched by Professor Alex Broadbent, Professor of Philosophy of Science and a member of the Institute for Medical Humanities.
A market street in Kenya with various traders and pedestrians

Join our Editorial Team for The Polyphony

We are seeking two part-time Associate Editors to join the Editorial Team of our medical humanities web platform The Polyphony.
dice with random letters

“The Polyphony Meets China”: New collaborative initiative at The Polyphony

The Institute for Medical Humanities (IMH) at Durham University is delighted to introduce “The Polyphony Meets China”, a new collaborative project between our web platform The Polyphony and the Narrative Medicine Research Centre (NMRC) at Southern Medical University (SMU).
Polyphony crop

New Report – Overcoming Barriers to Medical Humanities Research

A new report has been published which examines the barriers facing medical humanities researchers and identifies strategies for the future development of the field.
Image of report cover for 'Overcoming barriers to progress in medical humanities research'

Louise Creechan on BBC Free Thinking

Dr Louise Creechan, IMH Lecturer in Literary Medical Humanities, interviewed on BBC Radio 3 Free Thinking programme 'How to Read' discussing reading, Dyslexia and Neurodiversity.
BBC Free Thinking programme logo

Prof Jane Macnaughton to be awarded Honorary Fellowship from The Royal College of Physicians of Ireland

Prof Jane Macnaughton, former Director of Institute for Medical Humanities, has been recognised for her ‘significant contribution to medicine, healthcare and medical education’ by The Royal College of Physicians of Ireland (RCPI).
Jane Macnaughton

IMH Newsletter - July 2022

In the latest edition of the Institute for Medical Humanities' (IMH) newsletter, we welcome and congratulate a plethora of IMH staff on their new roles, outputs, and funding awards; discuss the success of our latest mental health voluntary sector workshop; and share our response to a UKRI PGR Consultation. We also highlight a selection of top-viewed articles from The Polyphony, share details of an upcoming 'Confabulations' event, and feature a new publication from the Hearing the Voice project.
IMH Newsletter (July 2022)

IMH Appoints New Professor in Practice, Akiko Hart

The Institute for Medical Humanities (IMH) are delighted to announce the appointment of our new Professor in Practice, Akiko Hart.
Akiko Hart

Dr Ellen Kendall Awarded Wellcome Trust Early-Career Fellowship

The Institute for Medical Humanities (IMH) are delighted to announce that Dr Ellen Kendall has been awarded a Wellcome Trust Early-Career Fellowship for the project titled: ‘Bodies of Water: Health Trade-offs and Climate Change in British Wetlands during the First Millennium AD’. The project will investigate trade-offs in human health in British wetlands during the Roman and medieval periods, with the aim of facilitating distinct insights into the benefits and risks of wetland environments.
Dr Ellen Kendall

New ‘Conversations about Arts, Humanities and Health’ Podcast with Professor Angela Woods

The most recent instalment of the University of Kent’s Medical Humanities Network podcast, ‘Conversations about Arts, Humanities and Health’, proudly features our Institute’s Director and Hearing the Voice Co-Director, Professor Angela Woods.
Professor Angela Woods

Dr Ruben Verwaal Launches ‘Yo, Doc, Listen Up!’ Exhibition about Deafness, Hardness of Hearing & Inclusive Healthcare

On Friday 1 July, the Institute for Medical Humanities' NWO Rubicon Research Fellow, Dr Ruben Verwaal, was proud to open the exhibition, ‘Yo, doc, listen up! (‘Hoor eens even!’), in the Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam.
Two people stood at either side of the 'Yo, Doc, Listen Up!' exhibition poster

IMH Hosts London Workshop with Mental Health-Focused Voluntary Sector Organisations and Durham University Researchers

The Institute for Medical Humanities (IMH), in partnership with the National Survivor User Network (NSUN), were proud to host a roundtable discussion with mental health-focused organisations in the Voluntary, Community and Social Enterprise (VCSE) sector, alongside Durham University researchers, in London on 29 June. The purpose of the event was to inform and shape the Institute’s future strategy for developing and sustaining long-term partnerships and research exchanges within the VCSE sector.
Five people sat conversing around a table together