Summary of the 2020 essay contest.
In 2020, those participating in the Pam and Rolando Del Maestro Family William Osler Medical Student Essay Awards had to contend with a unique challenge: how to write an original research paper in the humanities or social sciences without access to physical libraries. The essayists met the challenge and the resulting submissions were truly impressive. This year, we had the pleasure of hearing the results of the students' work at theÌýDel Maestro Family Medical Students' Humanities and Social Sciences Symposium.
In addition to congratulating the participants, we must give our deepest thanks to the mentors who worked with the students and to the essay awards committee, whose members had the unenviable task of choosing winners from a pool where each contribution was worthy in its own right.
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The results of the 2020 contest wereÌýas follows:Ìý
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First place:ÌýSaman Arfaie, " Exploring the Relationship Between Robert Schumann's Bipolar Disorder and His Creative Musical Genius.."ÌýÌýReflective piece by Saman Arfaie.
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Second place:ÌýMinahil Khan, "Colourful Innovations in Neuropathology: Robert Hooper and the Shift in Portrayal of the Morbid Brain in the Nineteenth Century."ÌýÌýReflective piece by Minahil Khan
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Third place:ÌýCassandra Poirier,Ìý"The Path of the Wounded Healer: Revisiting the Study of Shamanism Through a Phenomenological Approach."ÌýÌýReflective piece by Cassandra Poirier.
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In addition to the finalists above, weÌýthank the following essayists for participating in the symposium:
- Jenny Jing, “A Need to Renegotiate Physicians’ Social Contract in Sports Medicine.â€ÌýÌýReflective piece by Jenny Jing.
- Kayleigh Beaveridge, “Syphilis to Autism, How the Anti-Vaccination Movement of Today is an Echo of the Past.â€ÌýÌýReflective piece by Kayleigh Beaveridge.
- Britta Gustavson, “Re-embodying Medicine: William Carlos Williams and the Ethics of Attention.â€ÌýÌýReflective piece by Britta Gustavson.
- Matthew J. Schulz, “Neuroanesthesia and Neurosurgery’s Symbiotic Development.â€ÌýÌýReflective piece by Matthew Schulz.Ìý
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We would also like to acknowledge the work of those unable to present at the symposium:
- Ericka Iny, "The Commodification of Humanism: Methods, Marketing, and Morals of a Post-Modern Shift in the Philosophy of Medicine."ÌýÌýReflective piece by Ericka Iny.
- Kacper Niburski, “The Principles and Practice of Death: The Oslerian Conflicted Conception of Dying.â€ÌýÌýReflective piece by Kacper Niburski. A appeared in the Journal of Medical Biography.