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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

IMH Welcomes New NNMHR ECR Development Lead, Dr James Rákóczi

Following on from the successful work of Dr Christy Slobogin, the Northern Network for Medical Humanities (NNMHR) and Institute for Medical Humanities (IMH) welcomes Dr James Rákóczi to the role of Early-Career Researcher (ECR) Development Lead. IMH thanks Christy for all her efforts and wishes James the best of luck in this new endeavour.
Dr James Rákóczi

IMH Response to the UKRI Consultation on the ‘New Deal’ for Postgraduate Research

The Institute for Medical Humanities (IMH) respond to the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Consultation on a ‘New Deal’ for the future of Postgraduate Research (PGR).
UKRI Logo