Desmond O’Neill: Going digital for global medical humanities

To those teaching and researching the medical humanities, major exhibitions of great art represent a wonderful opportunity for a focal illumination of how medicine and the arts interact. However, for those who live a long way from the great galleries, the excellence of the writing and insights in the many reviews—including those in medical journals—are […]

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Desmond O’Neill: Eros and Methuselah—love and sexuality are important parts of human wellbeing

Although Valentine’s Day is often criticised as a cynical creation of florists and the greeting cards industry, it is a useful focal point for considering love and sexuality as elements of human wellbeing that often escape attention in healthcare. This neglect is most marked for later life, when popular discourse on late life romance is […]

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Desmond O’Neill: Technology and the medical humanities

One of the great challenges of progress in the medical humanities is that of time and space. Interested clinicians tend not to work in the arts blocks of universities, and humanities scholars rarely frequent clinical settings. The hard graft of interdisciplinary research is ever more elusive without the opportunity to mingle, discuss, and challenge. Our […]

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Desmond O’Neill: Ageing—simply complicated

Carinthia is a fascinating corner of Austria, formally included in the new Austrian Republic in a plebiscite in 1919 and imbued with the confluence of Austrian, Slovenian, and Italian cultures. Packed with history and culture, it provided rich material for underpinning a keynote lecture for the Austrian Geriatrics and Gerontology Society conference in Villach on how […]

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Desmond O’Neill: Peak medical students

Asked to do a column on medical education for an Irish newspaper, I was struck by how little professional debate we have had on the extraordinary increase in student intakes in these islands. Traditionally Ireland has had a large number of medical schools proportionate to its population: recent presentations in the Royal Colleges of Physicians […]

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Desmond O’Neill: Combating bar stool gerontology

One of the greatest challenges for us as we age is “bar stool gerontology.” For most complex subjects—nuclear physics, molecular biology, or philosophy—most of us recognise that some learning and education are required to grasp their fundamentals. Yet despite the fact that we are at our most complex in later life, it remains acceptable in […]

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Desmond O’Neill on Star Wars: The Force Awakens—and matures

Exams and the pre Christmas rush notwithstanding, a triple-line party whip was in force within the family for the midnight first screening of Star Wars, The Force Awakens. Sitting in the back row of a packed, expectant, and goodnatured cinema, I was struck by the number of contemporaries also attending with adult and teen children. […]

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