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Haiku Contest and Amazon Gift Card Winners Announced

Francois Theriault, a second year PhD student in the School of Epidemiology, Public Health, and Preventive Medicine at the University of Ottawa is the winner of our popular haiku contest and a $300 cash prize. He submitted a single haiku and received more than double the number of first place ranks compared to the nearest competitors. His winning haiku by this wide margin is:

Silent fall of tears

Wasted grant and squandered youth

P of point o six

 

When asked to comment on his inspiration for the winning haiku, Theriault told the Monitor “I am often frustrated with the importance attributed to arbitrary p-value cut-offs. This frustration was the main inspiration for my haiku. I tried to capture the absurdity and angst of the precise, deflating moment when researchers realize that their findings fall just short of an arbitrary cut-off for statistical significance, and that few people will consequently be interested in their results.”

The haiku receiving the most second place rankings was submitted by Sheila Weiss a Consultant Epidemiologist with Avigilan LLC in Potomac Maryland.

Sheila added an interesting note with her poem submission.  “My Haiku is inspired by Dr. Leon Gordis.  He introduced thousands of public health professionals (myself included) to epidemiology while instilling a healthy fear of summer picnics and potlucks.” She entitled her poem Epidemiology Exercise #1

Egg salad, stuffed ham

Hot sun, cool shade, eat and play

Outbreak tomorrow

We are awarding the third place finish based on rankings to Ed Pettitt a student at the University of Texas School of Public Health. His entry was:

Disease detective

Searching for a cause and cure

Alas, no funding

Other top 10 haiku which garnered the most rankings are listed below:

 

 With Snow in pursuit

Of pump handle causation

A science is born

 

 

Larry Kushi
Division of Research
Kaiser Permanente
Oakland, CA

 

 

Genies grant wishes

But poor epi researchers

Wish for grants instead

 

 

Rosi Hirst

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics

Imperial College London

 

Preventable deaths

Epi curves will save the world

If funding follows

 

 

Tamara Chavez-Lindell

East Tennessee Regional Health Office,

Knoxville, TN

 

 

 “Association’

Be sure not to confuse this

Word with “causation”

 

 

Aisha Dickerson

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Departments of Environmental Health and Epidemiology

Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

 




Confounded no more

Perhaps association

Reveals causation

 

 

Talia Malagon

Postdoctoral Fellow

Department of Oncology, Division of Cancer Epidemiology

McGill University

 



Disease shed data

Epidemiology

Spreads understanding

 

 

Matthew Francis

Epidemiologist

Procter & Gamble

Morrow, Ohio

 

 

 Disease within few

Provides us with the insight

To prevent in more

 


Matthew Francis

Epidemiologist

Procter & Gamble

Morrow, Ohio

 

More than 200 readers ranked their three favorite poems and the following eight readers were randomly chosen to receive a $25 Amazon gift card.

Tabatha Offutt-Powell
State Epidemiologist and Section Chief
Epidemiology, Health Data, and Informatics
Delaware Division of Public Health
Dover, Delaware 19901

 

Adaze Wosu
PhD student in Epidemiology
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

 

Starr Eaddy
Director of Service- Learning
Associate Professor
Department of Biology and Health Science
St. Francis College
Brooklyn Heights, NY
 

Lara Blumstein
Research Project Manager
University of Illinois at Chicago,
Institute for Health Research and Policy 
 

Craig Olbrich
Senior Hardware Design Engineer
HP Inc.
Corvallis, OR
 

Amy Hirst
VTTI MLP Services Ltd
Warwick House
25-27 Buckingham Palace Road
London


Cheryl Broussard
National Center on Birth Defects and
Developmental Disabilities
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention


Margaret Wrensh
Professor Emeritus
University of California
San Francisco

Many thanks to all for participating in our Epi Haiku Contest!

 


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