Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/14/wellcome-photography-prize-launched-with-focus-health-research
Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on healthAdam Michael Smith
Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/14/wellcome-photography-prize-launched-with-focus-health-research
The document discusses effective engagement between academics and government/non-governmental organizations on issues related to aging. It provides tips for academics, including writing clearly and understand potential audiences, disseminating research throughout the process, and partnering with think tanks who can help communicate research to policymakers. Academics are encouraged to make the research process open and accessible to non-academic audiences.
I hope you have found this issue to be informative and helpful in your work. Please send me any information you'd like posted in upcoming issues.
Any recommendations to improve this communique would be most appreciated!
And if you’d like to support the Center’s work with a tax deductible donation, that would be fantastic and do a great deal: http://centerforglobalinitiatives.org/donateNow.cfm
Cheers, and thank you for your work,
Chris
I hope you find this issue to be informative and helpful in your work. Please send me any information you’d like posted in upcoming issues.
The embedded links may not work in SlideShare, so please feel free to email me for a copy at DrChrisStout@gmail.com to be added to our email list.
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Any recommendations to improve this communique would be most appreciated!
And if you’d like to support the Center’s work with a tax deductible donation, that would be fantastic(!) and do a great deal: http://centerforglobalinitiatives.org/donateNow.cfm
Cheers, and thank you for your work,
Chris
The best health news over the last decadeJA Larson
The document summarizes 15 of the most positive health news stories from 2010-2019. Some key developments include:
- CT scans reducing lung cancer mortality when used for high-risk patients in 2011.
- Approval of the first drug for metastatic melanoma in a decade in 2011.
- Discovery of CRISPR gene editing technology in 2012 allowing for gene manipulation.
- FDA announcement in 2013 that trans fats should no longer be considered safe.
- Approval of a pill to help prevent HIV transmission in 2014.
The 1,000 Ukes of Light campaign by CHNGNF8.org aims to provide ukuleles and music instruction to cancer survivors to promote healing through music. The campaign will provide 150 ukuleles to survivors around the world for $10,500 through a 4 phase plan: 1) Prepare staff, 2) Implement operating plan, 3) Develop instructional materials, and 4) Assess the program. The goal is to enhance lives of survivors and generate awareness and future funding for the organization's services.
The document is a magazine that contains articles on various health, lifestyle and fitness topics such as allergies, food, beauty, fashion, exercise, travel, and health features. It includes summaries of articles on defibrillators, enhanced recovery after surgery, day case surgery, radiotherapy, sports injuries, prostate health, decoding a cough, and profiles on people such as Ben Fogle. The magazine also contains advertisements.
Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on healthAdam Michael Smith
Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/14/wellcome-photography-prize-launched-with-focus-health-research
The document discusses effective engagement between academics and government/non-governmental organizations on issues related to aging. It provides tips for academics, including writing clearly and understand potential audiences, disseminating research throughout the process, and partnering with think tanks who can help communicate research to policymakers. Academics are encouraged to make the research process open and accessible to non-academic audiences.
I hope you have found this issue to be informative and helpful in your work. Please send me any information you'd like posted in upcoming issues.
Any recommendations to improve this communique would be most appreciated!
And if you’d like to support the Center’s work with a tax deductible donation, that would be fantastic and do a great deal: http://centerforglobalinitiatives.org/donateNow.cfm
Cheers, and thank you for your work,
Chris
I hope you find this issue to be informative and helpful in your work. Please send me any information you’d like posted in upcoming issues.
The embedded links may not work in SlideShare, so please feel free to email me for a copy at DrChrisStout@gmail.com to be added to our email list.
You can join our Facebook Group and interact with over 1200 likeminded individuals at:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/CenterForGlobalInitiatives/
Any recommendations to improve this communique would be most appreciated!
And if you’d like to support the Center’s work with a tax deductible donation, that would be fantastic(!) and do a great deal: http://centerforglobalinitiatives.org/donateNow.cfm
Cheers, and thank you for your work,
Chris
The best health news over the last decadeJA Larson
The document summarizes 15 of the most positive health news stories from 2010-2019. Some key developments include:
- CT scans reducing lung cancer mortality when used for high-risk patients in 2011.
- Approval of the first drug for metastatic melanoma in a decade in 2011.
- Discovery of CRISPR gene editing technology in 2012 allowing for gene manipulation.
- FDA announcement in 2013 that trans fats should no longer be considered safe.
- Approval of a pill to help prevent HIV transmission in 2014.
The 1,000 Ukes of Light campaign by CHNGNF8.org aims to provide ukuleles and music instruction to cancer survivors to promote healing through music. The campaign will provide 150 ukuleles to survivors around the world for $10,500 through a 4 phase plan: 1) Prepare staff, 2) Implement operating plan, 3) Develop instructional materials, and 4) Assess the program. The goal is to enhance lives of survivors and generate awareness and future funding for the organization's services.
The document is a magazine that contains articles on various health, lifestyle and fitness topics such as allergies, food, beauty, fashion, exercise, travel, and health features. It includes summaries of articles on defibrillators, enhanced recovery after surgery, day case surgery, radiotherapy, sports injuries, prostate health, decoding a cough, and profiles on people such as Ben Fogle. The magazine also contains advertisements.
1. The document is a magazine called HCA Good Health that covers health, food, fashion, beauty and travel topics.
2. It includes features on various health conditions like allergies and prostate health, as well as lifestyle articles on topics like exercise, womens and mens fashion, and food.
3. It also profiles people in the health field, provides medical advice from doctors, and shares patient stories about undergoing operations and recovery programs.
This document provides information about Rare Disease Day events and awards that took place on March 21, 2018 in Ottawa. It summarizes the awards presented for Policy Leadership, Rare Disease Leadership, Scientific Leadership, volunteer contributions, and patient organization support. It also lists monuments across Canada that were lit up in recognition of Rare Disease Day on February 28, 2018. Finally, it outlines CORD's roles advocating for rare diseases internationally, nationally, and provincially.
World Cancer day celebration 4.2.2023.pptxanjalatchi
In 2023, the global cancer community commemorates World Cancer Day, on February 4, with the slogan "Close the care gap", and the call to unite our voices and take action.
World Cancer day celebration 4.2.2023.pptxanjalatchi
World Cancer Day is an international day marked on 4 February to raise awareness of cancer and to encourage its prevention, detection, and treatment. World Cancer Day is led by the Union for International Cancer Control to support the goals of the World Cancer Declaration, written in 2008
Our ebook 'Communicating in a Crisis' explores how public relations was successfully used in the pandemic and features case studies from agency, in-house and public sector teams shortlisted in our 2021 Excellence Awards.
Malaria is a life-threatening disease transmitted through mosquito bites. It is caused by Plasmodium parasites and infects around 3.3 billion people worldwide each year. Common symptoms include fever, shaking chills, flu-like illness, and anemia. It is diagnosed through blood tests and treated with antimalarial drugs. Prevention methods focus on eliminating mosquitoes and limiting exposure through bed nets and insecticides. Despite efforts, malaria remains a significant global health problem, especially in parts of Africa, Asia, and South America.
Minister Motsoaledi recognised for his role in the fight against TBSABC News
The Minister of Health, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, will this evening receive two prestigious Kochon Prizes. He will receive the first prize in his individual capacity for his role and political leadership in fight against Tuberculosis globally.
The document summarizes the February 2016 newsletter from the Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations (CTPSR). It discusses:
- Four Commonwealth Fellows from Africa visiting CTPSR to learn about natural resource governance and peacebuilding.
- An AHRC grant awarded to research sustaining LGBTQ lives in refugee youth.
- CTPSR hosting creative workshops exploring race, faith and sexuality with young people from refugee backgrounds.
- Professor Alp Ozerdem being selected as co-chair of the Peace Section of the International Studies Association for 2017-2018.
This document provides information about Dr. Paul Cornes and his work in oncology. It discloses that Dr. Cornes receives a salary from the UK National Health Service and has received honoraria from several pharmaceutical companies. The bulk of the document discusses the costs of cancer to individuals and societies and highlights both challenges and areas of progress in cancer treatment, including improved survival rates due to innovations in targeted therapies and monoclonal antibodies.
Global Journal of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Research is an international peer-reviewed journal founded by a network of experts across the globe recognized as the International Infectiologists Network. The mission of GJIDCR is to promote and publish infectious diseases research in areas of basic sciences, clinical medicine and public health.
GJIDCR encourages research, education and dissemination of knowledge in the field of Infectious Diseases across the world thus promoting translational research by striking a synergy between basic science, clinical medicine and public health. The Journal intends to bring together scientists and academicians in Infectious Diseases to promote translational synergy between Laboratory Science, Clinical Medicine and Public Health. The Journal invites Original Articles, Clinical Investigations, Epidemiological Analysis, Data Protocols, Case Reports, Clinical Photographs, review articles and special commentaries. Students, Residents, Academicians, Public Health experts and scientists are all encouraged to be a part of this initiative by contributing, reviewing and promoting scientific works and science.
This document discusses how information about climate change is communicated and framed by different groups. It explores how scientists communicate their findings and who believes climate change is real based on evidence. It also examines how fossil fuel industry groups have run disinformation campaigns using tobacco industry tactics to sow doubt and delay action, similar to how tobacco companies denied health risks of smoking for decades.
The nations of the world have agreed to the first global treaty to ban mercury emissions. Key aspects of the treaty include phasing out mercury in industrial processes and products, banning primary mercury mining, limiting emissions from power plants, and controlling exports and imports of mercury. The treaty also establishes funding to help developing countries phase out mercury in artisanal gold mining, which is a major source of emissions in parts of Latin America, Africa and Asia. While not banning mercury in vaccines, the treaty aims to significantly reduce global mercury use by 2020 if fully implemented.
The document discusses how open access to research can help address issues in developing countries. It notes that knowledge and access to information is key to helping these nations progress. Open access publishing makes research freely available to those who need it most. This benefits global health by allowing more resources to be devoted to research on diseases predominantly affecting developing regions. Researchers, professionals and the public in developing areas can then apply these findings to local challenges.
Improving access to knowledge in the developing worldMatthew Cockerill
The document discusses how open access to research can help address issues in developing countries. It notes that knowledge and access to information is key to helping these nations progress. Open access publishing makes research freely available to those who need it most. This benefits global health by allowing more resources to be devoted to research on diseases prevalent in developing areas. Researchers, professionals and the public in developing nations can then apply these findings to local issues.
World Peace Essay. Persuasive Essay: Persuasive essay about world peaceJodi Hartman
Here are four poems by Anne Sexton that demonstrate how she used poetry as a form of communication and expression during psychotherapy:
1. "Music Swims Back to Me" expresses longing for connection and intimacy through vivid sensory language and metaphor.
2. "Wanting to Die" gives a raw, visceral glimpse into Sexton's suicidal thoughts and mental anguish.
3. "Her Kind" conveys the isolation of depression through the speaker's dark self-image and the last line's defiant assertion of identity.
4. "The Room of My Life" depicts Sexton's state of mind through the metaphor of a cluttered room, symbolizing her chaotic inner world.
Together these poems offer a
MedicReS 2014 World Congress Proceedings BookMedicReS
This document provides the program details for the 4th World Congress on Pre-Clinical Experiments taking place in New York from October 17-20, 2014. It includes an introduction by Burak Akicier on the importance of addressing global health issues like epidemics.
The program consists of invited sessions on topics like biostatistics and ethics, waste in medical literature, improving collaboration. There are also contributed oral presentation sessions on various medical research studies and issues. Distinguished speakers will provide talks on subjects such as why most published studies are wrong, ethical issues in authorship, and developing animal models. Nicholas Jewell, the co-chair, encourages participation, especially from young biostatisticians, to network and learn about cutting edge
Gilles Frydman argues that social media and art can help re-humanize clinical research by putting a human face on scientific discoveries and clinical trials. He discusses how online communities have grown exponentially since 1995 but how information about clinical trials and cancer patients on Google often depicts impaired agency, deindividuation, and dissimilarity. Frydman advocates using social media campaigns combining art and photojournalism to more widely disseminate accurate scientific information and clinical trials opportunities to diverse patient groups in order to reduce health inequalities.
From Plato’s Cave to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Confinement, Social Distancing, ...Université de Montréal
From Plato’s Cave to the COVID-19 Pandemic:
Confinement, Social Distancing, and Biopolitics
Abstract
This essay by a physician-philosopher compares the COVID-19 pandemic to Plato’s allegory of the cave, where prisoners see only shadows cast on the walls of their cave and know them as their only reality. Raised there since childhood, they experience sensory deprivation, impacting their brains and their minds, limiting their perceptions and their understanding. The philosopher who escapes from the cave into the harsh light of day and returns to tell the truth is met by fellow prisoners with derision. The pandemic’s preventive measures of confinement and social distancing may induce sensory deprivation and trauma, creating an “experimental childhood” for billions of vulnerable youth. In the political sphere, philosophers like Giorgio Agamben warn that the COVID-19 crisis creates a pretext for emergency measures, at worst a “techno-medical despotism” in a new form of biopolitics, declaring a medical state of exception where the pandemic crisis is the new normal.
Key words: Plato’s cave, COVID-19 pandemic, sensory deprivation, confinement, social distancing, biopolitics
Public health and Community medicine as a professional career; awareness & op...Dr. Shatanik Mondal
Public health and community medicine is an enormously diverse and dynamic field enthralling with so many sub-specialities. It has grown from infection prevention to chronic diseases, mental health, environmental health, bioterrorism, demography and many more. Public health is still at its infancy in India, but there is a huge potential in the next 10-15 years. MBBS students in India find it very difficult to digest community medicine as a subject in their curriculum in general till now. This presentation will show the importance of the subject and how they can think community medicine as their future career, all its job prospects and opportunities.
Best practices for project execution and deliveryCLIVE MINCHIN
A select set of project management best practices to keep your project on-track, on-cost and aligned to scope. Many firms have don't have the necessary skills, diligence, methods and oversight of their projects; this leads to slippage, higher costs and longer timeframes. Often firms have a history of projects that simply failed to move the needle. These best practices will help your firm avoid these pitfalls but they require fortitude to apply.
1. The document is a magazine called HCA Good Health that covers health, food, fashion, beauty and travel topics.
2. It includes features on various health conditions like allergies and prostate health, as well as lifestyle articles on topics like exercise, womens and mens fashion, and food.
3. It also profiles people in the health field, provides medical advice from doctors, and shares patient stories about undergoing operations and recovery programs.
This document provides information about Rare Disease Day events and awards that took place on March 21, 2018 in Ottawa. It summarizes the awards presented for Policy Leadership, Rare Disease Leadership, Scientific Leadership, volunteer contributions, and patient organization support. It also lists monuments across Canada that were lit up in recognition of Rare Disease Day on February 28, 2018. Finally, it outlines CORD's roles advocating for rare diseases internationally, nationally, and provincially.
World Cancer day celebration 4.2.2023.pptxanjalatchi
In 2023, the global cancer community commemorates World Cancer Day, on February 4, with the slogan "Close the care gap", and the call to unite our voices and take action.
World Cancer day celebration 4.2.2023.pptxanjalatchi
World Cancer Day is an international day marked on 4 February to raise awareness of cancer and to encourage its prevention, detection, and treatment. World Cancer Day is led by the Union for International Cancer Control to support the goals of the World Cancer Declaration, written in 2008
Our ebook 'Communicating in a Crisis' explores how public relations was successfully used in the pandemic and features case studies from agency, in-house and public sector teams shortlisted in our 2021 Excellence Awards.
Malaria is a life-threatening disease transmitted through mosquito bites. It is caused by Plasmodium parasites and infects around 3.3 billion people worldwide each year. Common symptoms include fever, shaking chills, flu-like illness, and anemia. It is diagnosed through blood tests and treated with antimalarial drugs. Prevention methods focus on eliminating mosquitoes and limiting exposure through bed nets and insecticides. Despite efforts, malaria remains a significant global health problem, especially in parts of Africa, Asia, and South America.
Minister Motsoaledi recognised for his role in the fight against TBSABC News
The Minister of Health, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, will this evening receive two prestigious Kochon Prizes. He will receive the first prize in his individual capacity for his role and political leadership in fight against Tuberculosis globally.
The document summarizes the February 2016 newsletter from the Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations (CTPSR). It discusses:
- Four Commonwealth Fellows from Africa visiting CTPSR to learn about natural resource governance and peacebuilding.
- An AHRC grant awarded to research sustaining LGBTQ lives in refugee youth.
- CTPSR hosting creative workshops exploring race, faith and sexuality with young people from refugee backgrounds.
- Professor Alp Ozerdem being selected as co-chair of the Peace Section of the International Studies Association for 2017-2018.
This document provides information about Dr. Paul Cornes and his work in oncology. It discloses that Dr. Cornes receives a salary from the UK National Health Service and has received honoraria from several pharmaceutical companies. The bulk of the document discusses the costs of cancer to individuals and societies and highlights both challenges and areas of progress in cancer treatment, including improved survival rates due to innovations in targeted therapies and monoclonal antibodies.
Global Journal of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Research is an international peer-reviewed journal founded by a network of experts across the globe recognized as the International Infectiologists Network. The mission of GJIDCR is to promote and publish infectious diseases research in areas of basic sciences, clinical medicine and public health.
GJIDCR encourages research, education and dissemination of knowledge in the field of Infectious Diseases across the world thus promoting translational research by striking a synergy between basic science, clinical medicine and public health. The Journal intends to bring together scientists and academicians in Infectious Diseases to promote translational synergy between Laboratory Science, Clinical Medicine and Public Health. The Journal invites Original Articles, Clinical Investigations, Epidemiological Analysis, Data Protocols, Case Reports, Clinical Photographs, review articles and special commentaries. Students, Residents, Academicians, Public Health experts and scientists are all encouraged to be a part of this initiative by contributing, reviewing and promoting scientific works and science.
This document discusses how information about climate change is communicated and framed by different groups. It explores how scientists communicate their findings and who believes climate change is real based on evidence. It also examines how fossil fuel industry groups have run disinformation campaigns using tobacco industry tactics to sow doubt and delay action, similar to how tobacco companies denied health risks of smoking for decades.
The nations of the world have agreed to the first global treaty to ban mercury emissions. Key aspects of the treaty include phasing out mercury in industrial processes and products, banning primary mercury mining, limiting emissions from power plants, and controlling exports and imports of mercury. The treaty also establishes funding to help developing countries phase out mercury in artisanal gold mining, which is a major source of emissions in parts of Latin America, Africa and Asia. While not banning mercury in vaccines, the treaty aims to significantly reduce global mercury use by 2020 if fully implemented.
The document discusses how open access to research can help address issues in developing countries. It notes that knowledge and access to information is key to helping these nations progress. Open access publishing makes research freely available to those who need it most. This benefits global health by allowing more resources to be devoted to research on diseases predominantly affecting developing regions. Researchers, professionals and the public in developing areas can then apply these findings to local challenges.
Improving access to knowledge in the developing worldMatthew Cockerill
The document discusses how open access to research can help address issues in developing countries. It notes that knowledge and access to information is key to helping these nations progress. Open access publishing makes research freely available to those who need it most. This benefits global health by allowing more resources to be devoted to research on diseases prevalent in developing areas. Researchers, professionals and the public in developing nations can then apply these findings to local issues.
World Peace Essay. Persuasive Essay: Persuasive essay about world peaceJodi Hartman
Here are four poems by Anne Sexton that demonstrate how she used poetry as a form of communication and expression during psychotherapy:
1. "Music Swims Back to Me" expresses longing for connection and intimacy through vivid sensory language and metaphor.
2. "Wanting to Die" gives a raw, visceral glimpse into Sexton's suicidal thoughts and mental anguish.
3. "Her Kind" conveys the isolation of depression through the speaker's dark self-image and the last line's defiant assertion of identity.
4. "The Room of My Life" depicts Sexton's state of mind through the metaphor of a cluttered room, symbolizing her chaotic inner world.
Together these poems offer a
MedicReS 2014 World Congress Proceedings BookMedicReS
This document provides the program details for the 4th World Congress on Pre-Clinical Experiments taking place in New York from October 17-20, 2014. It includes an introduction by Burak Akicier on the importance of addressing global health issues like epidemics.
The program consists of invited sessions on topics like biostatistics and ethics, waste in medical literature, improving collaboration. There are also contributed oral presentation sessions on various medical research studies and issues. Distinguished speakers will provide talks on subjects such as why most published studies are wrong, ethical issues in authorship, and developing animal models. Nicholas Jewell, the co-chair, encourages participation, especially from young biostatisticians, to network and learn about cutting edge
Gilles Frydman argues that social media and art can help re-humanize clinical research by putting a human face on scientific discoveries and clinical trials. He discusses how online communities have grown exponentially since 1995 but how information about clinical trials and cancer patients on Google often depicts impaired agency, deindividuation, and dissimilarity. Frydman advocates using social media campaigns combining art and photojournalism to more widely disseminate accurate scientific information and clinical trials opportunities to diverse patient groups in order to reduce health inequalities.
From Plato’s Cave to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Confinement, Social Distancing, ...Université de Montréal
From Plato’s Cave to the COVID-19 Pandemic:
Confinement, Social Distancing, and Biopolitics
Abstract
This essay by a physician-philosopher compares the COVID-19 pandemic to Plato’s allegory of the cave, where prisoners see only shadows cast on the walls of their cave and know them as their only reality. Raised there since childhood, they experience sensory deprivation, impacting their brains and their minds, limiting their perceptions and their understanding. The philosopher who escapes from the cave into the harsh light of day and returns to tell the truth is met by fellow prisoners with derision. The pandemic’s preventive measures of confinement and social distancing may induce sensory deprivation and trauma, creating an “experimental childhood” for billions of vulnerable youth. In the political sphere, philosophers like Giorgio Agamben warn that the COVID-19 crisis creates a pretext for emergency measures, at worst a “techno-medical despotism” in a new form of biopolitics, declaring a medical state of exception where the pandemic crisis is the new normal.
Key words: Plato’s cave, COVID-19 pandemic, sensory deprivation, confinement, social distancing, biopolitics
Public health and Community medicine as a professional career; awareness & op...Dr. Shatanik Mondal
Public health and community medicine is an enormously diverse and dynamic field enthralling with so many sub-specialities. It has grown from infection prevention to chronic diseases, mental health, environmental health, bioterrorism, demography and many more. Public health is still at its infancy in India, but there is a huge potential in the next 10-15 years. MBBS students in India find it very difficult to digest community medicine as a subject in their curriculum in general till now. This presentation will show the importance of the subject and how they can think community medicine as their future career, all its job prospects and opportunities.
Similar to Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health (20)
Best practices for project execution and deliveryCLIVE MINCHIN
A select set of project management best practices to keep your project on-track, on-cost and aligned to scope. Many firms have don't have the necessary skills, diligence, methods and oversight of their projects; this leads to slippage, higher costs and longer timeframes. Often firms have a history of projects that simply failed to move the needle. These best practices will help your firm avoid these pitfalls but they require fortitude to apply.
Starting a business is like embarking on an unpredictable adventure. It’s a journey filled with highs and lows, victories and defeats. But what if I told you that those setbacks and failures could be the very stepping stones that lead you to fortune? Let’s explore how resilience, adaptability, and strategic thinking can transform adversity into opportunity.
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Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health
1. 8/24/2018 Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health | Art and design | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/14/wellcome-photography-prize-launched-with-focus-health-research 1/3
Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on
health
Mark Brown Arts correspondent
Competition aims to encourage a ‘more diverse view of what research and health means’
Tue 14 Aug 2018 11.18 EDT
A new international photography prize for pictures that tell stories about health, medicine and
science has been launched by the charitable foundation Wellcome.
It said the competition aimed to do for health what the Natural History Museum’s wildlife
photographer of the year award had done for nature or the Prix Pictet prize had done for
environmental and sustainability issues.
The Wellcome photography prize is a revamp and expansion of the Wellcome image awards that
ran for 20 years, a long enough period to warrant a re-examination of the prize, said Jeremy
Farrar, director of Wellcome. “We’ve changed, the world has changed and the way health and
research works has changed.”
2. 8/24/2018 Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health | Art and design | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/14/wellcome-photography-prize-launched-with-focus-health-research 2/3
He said he hoped the new prize, as part of Wellcome’s mission to improve health, would
encourage “a more diverse view of what research and health means”.
He added: “As a doctor and a scientist, I’ve seen how powerful visual imagery can start
conversations, bring complex arguments to life and change the way the world responds to health
challenges.”
For many years the prize targeted clinical and imaging experts. The new prize is open to anyone,
whether a photographer, photojournalist, artist, researcher or clinical photographer. It is free to
enter and comes with a boosted first prize of £15,000.
There will be four new categories in which people can submit images, including one called
“hidden worlds”. “That could be the microscopic world,” said Farrar. “But I’m certainly hoping
that the hidden world will be taken in a very broad context and can be interpreted in any way a
great photographer chooses.”
The other categories are “medicine in focus”, “social perspectives” and a global health theme that
will change annually. In 2019 it will be “outbreaks”, something that remains grimly topical with
Susan Smart’s photo of a patient being treated at a makeshift eye
clinic in India won the Wellcome image award in 2017. Photograph:
Susan Smart/Wellcome
3. 8/24/2018 Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health | Art and design | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/14/wellcome-photography-prize-launched-with-focus-health-research 3/3
the recent news of a return of the Ebola virus to the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Farrar said winning entries “might be based on one person or a family, have a cast of millions or
reveal what’s happening in a single cell. What will unite them is the quality of the image and the
astonishing stories behind them.”
The deadline for submissions is 17 December. Winners will be announced at an awards ceremony
in the summer of 2019, and an exhibition of the best photographs will be staged at the Central
Saint Martins Lethaby Gallery in London.
People entering the contest will clearly be tackling big, serious and sometimes life-and-death
subjects, but Farrar said that did not rule out quirkiness. “A sense of humour through all of this is
crucial.”
Farrar will be chair of a judging panel that also consists of Pete Muller, a National Geographic
photographer; Joanne Liu, international president of Médecins Sans Frontières; Dr Heidi Larson,
director of the Vaccine Confidence Project at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine; Dan M Davis, professor of immunology at the University of Manchester; Emma
Bowkett, director of photography at FT Weekend magazine; and Azu Nwagbogu, curator at large
for photography at the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa in Cape Town, South Africa.
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