Award to be anounced at Harvard for the 2017 Hippocrates Young Poets Prize

Poets from England, Singapore and the USA are finalists for the major Young Poet awards in this year’s Hippocrates Prize for Poetry and Medicine.

In the running for the £500 Young Poet Award are from the USA, Rachel Litchman, Michigan, Joyce Zhou, Illinois, and Erin O’Malley, Pennsylvania; from the UK Roberta Maia Sher, London and Izzy Wythe, Oundle; and from Singapore Vernon Yian.

The Hippocrates Young Poets Prize is supported by healthy heart charity the Cardiovascular Research Trust.

2017 Hippocrates Young Poet shortlist

Young Poets judge, New York writer and teacher Maya Catherine Popa, said: “It is wonderful that a prize with this kind of international visibility aims to encourage young writers from around the globe. As a teacher of this age group, I am often amazed at the creativity, insight, and skill of young writers. I wish more prizes aimed to showcase and support these voices.”

The Young Poet winner will be announced at Harvard on Saturday 6th May at an international symposium on poetry and medicine. Winning and shortlisted poems in the Young Poets Prize are published in the annual Hippocrates Prize Anthology.

There is still time to register for the Awards ceremony and the symposium on 6th May and for the associated event at the Boston Museum of Fine Art on ‘Poetry and Training the Eye’ on Friday 5th May.

The Hippocrates Prize attracts health professionals and established poets alike, with entries this year from over 30 countries. This year, themes have ranged from illness in children to recovery from depression and from cancer to treating victims in conflict zones.

The Hippocrates Young Poets Prize for Poetry and Medicine is awarded is open to anyone in the world aged 14 – 18 for a new poem in English of up to 50 lines on a medical theme.

Awards will be presented in on 6th May 2017 at a ceremony at Harvard Medical School in the USA, supported by the Hippocrates Initiative and the Arts and Humanities Initiative of Harvard Medical School.

Winning and shortlisted poems in the Young Poets Prize are published in the annual Hippocrates Prize Anthology.

Shortlisted in the Hippocrates Health Professional category are Kathy D’Arcy from Cork, Ireland, who has worked as a doctor and youth worker, Iora Dawes, from Stafford, who has worked as a medical social worker, and respiratory physician Andrew Dimitri from Sydney, Australia, who is also a field doctor for the international humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières.

Competing for the top award in the Hippocrates Open category are poets Claire Collison from London, England, Rosie Jackson from Somerset in England and Alisha Kaplan from Toronto in Canada.

See more on all the shortlisted and commended poets in the 2017 Hippocrates Prize.

With a prize fund of £500 /~ USD 700 for winning and commended poems, the Hippocrates Young Poet Prize is one of the highest value poetry awardsof its kind in the world for a single poem. Since it was founded in 2012 by clinical professor Donald Singer and poet Michael Hulse, there has been interest in the Hippocrates Young Poets Prize from 15 countries, with winners and commended poets from the UK, USA, Hong Kong and Canada.

The Hippocrates Young Poets Prize is supported by healthy heart charity the Cardiovascular Research Trust and run by the Hippocrates Initiative for Poetry and Medicine, which received the 2011 Times Higher Education Award for Innovation and Excellence in the Arts for its work on the interface between medicine, the arts and health.

See more about the shortlisted and commended poets and what inspired them.

Notes for editors

For more on the shortlisted poets and the 2017 Hippocrates Awards,
contact +44 7494 450 805 or +1 617 432 5693 or email hippocrates.poetry@gmail.com

Hippocrates website

2017 Hippocrates Judge

Maya C. Popa.JPGMaya Catherine Popa is a writer and teacher in NYC. A 2015 Ruth Lilly finalist, she is the recipient of the Poetry Foundation Editor’s Prize for review. Her poetry appears in Tin House, Kenyon Review, Poetry London, and elsewhere. Her criticism and non-fiction appear widely, including in Poetry, Poets & Writers Magazine, PN Review, and The Huffington Post. Her chapbook, The Bees Have Been Canceled, is forthcoming from DIAGRAM New Michigan Press in the U.S., and Southword Editions in Ireland, in winter 2017.

Her awards include the Hippocrates Poetry Prize, 2nd place in the Magma Poetry Prize, 3rd Place in the Narrative N30B Prize, the Gregory O’Donoghue Competition, Parallel Universe Competition, and the Oxford Poetry Society Martin Starkie Prize. She holds an MFA from NYU and an Mst in Writing from Oxford University, where she was a Clarendon Scholar. She teaches at the Nightingale-Bamford school in New York City.

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