The Health and Humanities Division of St. John's Medical College, led by Mario and Manjulika Vaz, joined the Silk Routes project through its work with Sridala Swami and Kavery Nambisan, both of whom received a small grant from the International Writing Program's Silk Routes: Heritage, Trade, Practice project to bring creativity to the medical professions.
The gallery of St. John's includes student writing and events hosted by the division as a part of the Local Project, "Humanising Medicine."
media_image
|
media_image
|
media_image
|
By Sitarah Mathias, a third-year student at St. John's Medical College Chhatarpur. A sleepy, dusty little town in Madhya Pradesh connected only by road, where life moved in slow motion. Yet, a... media_text
|
Tia Teresa Thomas Today was the last day of our 10-day posting in Emergency Medicine. We were only in fourth term so the prospect of Emergency Medicine excited us more than anything.. Our posting was during... media_text
|
media_image
|
By Aiswarya Sasi (2015) I walked into the eerily quiet room, like a rabbit venturing into a lion’s cave. In the middle of the room was a lone table, with chairs at both its ends. On one chair... media_text
|
Helena Makri “If ever there was a book calculated to make a man in love with its author, this appears to me to me to be the book”—William Godwin (on reading a narrative by his future wife) It was mid-... media_text
|
media_image
|
media_image
|
media_image
|
A Personal Reflective Narrative by Dr. Rodney Dcunha, an Internat St. John’s Medical College, Bangalore Death disturbs me. It never fails to. And what disturbs me more are the... media_text
|