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MK Stone Fellows Event. Science and Humanities: An Intertwined Helix

Friday, March 25, 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm, JO 4.122, UT Dallas Campus

Ideal for students seeking health profession-related careers, the event features brief talks by a panel of four experts on the intersection of science and humanities in various settings with a special focus on healthcare. The panel includes an audience Q&A as well as a presentation of compiled resources for further exploration on the topic.

Program of the Event

12:00 pm – Welcome and Introductions Remarks, Dr. Matthew Brown, CVMST Director, and Arlin Khan, MS Stone Fellow

12:05 pm – Dr. Marvin Stone, William Osler and the value of humanities in medicine

12:25 pm – Dr. Fred Grinnell, Science and humanities in the field of biomedical ethics

12:45 pm – First Q&A session

1:00 pm – Dr. Scott Podolsky, Utility of medical humanities in medical education and in practice

1:20 pm – Mr. Doyen Rainey, Punctuation… and critical reasoning.

1:40 pm – Second Q&Q session

1:55 pm – Conclusions, presentation of resources, Arlin Khan and Gregorio Barahona Ocampo, MK Stone Fellows

About the Panelists

Dr. Marvin J. Stone, MD, MACP, FRCP is Chief Emeritus of Hematology and Oncology at Baylor University Medical Center/Dallas,  Professor of Medicine at Texas A&M College of Medicine, and Clinical Professor of Humanities at the University of Texas at Dallas.  He is a Master of the American College of Physicians, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians (London), and Trustee of the Southwestern Medical Foundation.

Fred Grinnell, PhD is the Robert McLemore Professor of Medical Science in the department of cell biology at UT Southwestern Medical Center, where he joined the faculty in 1972. Dr. Grinnell teaches bioethics and does research on science education. In 1998, he founded and was the first director of the UT Southwestern Ethics in Science and Medicine Program and later organized the North Texas Bioethics Network.

Dr. Scott H. Podolsky, MD is a Professor of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Director of the Center for the History of Medicine at the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, and a primary care physician at Massachusetts General Hospital.  He authored, co-authored, and co-edited numerous publications on the history of medicine, including but not limited to The Antibiotic Era: Reform, Resistance, and the Pursuit of a Rational Therapeutics (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2015).  He has also written extensively on the history of clinical trials.

Doyen Rainey, MAT, is a UT Dallas alum. He was a McDermott Legacy Scholar and campus leader, active in Student Government, and as Speaker for the Collegium V honors college. He earned three Teacher Certifications and a Master’s in Teaching, bachelor’s degrees in Literary Studies and Psychology, and a national Scholastic Art and Writing award for short fiction. Since joining the Health Professions Advising Center (HPAC), Mr. Rainey has created four UT Dallas classes including Verbal Reasoning for Pre-Health, one of the nation’s most effective short curricula to develop critical thinking for MCAT.