‘Doctors – like poets – need to be in touch with their feelings’

The poet João Luis Barreto Guimarães (1967) is a breast cancer surgeon, who uses poetry alongside medicine to help trainee doctors empathize with their patients.

In 1989 he made his literary debut with the collection Há Violinos na Tribo (The Tribe has Violins). In 2020, the English version of his bundle of poems Mediterrãneo was awarded the Willow Run Poetry Book Award in the USA. He was the first author of non-American origin to receive this honour. In Portugal, he received the Pessoa prize in 2022 in recognition of his contribution to the arts.

‘Poetry has a unique capacity to help students connect holistically with their future patients, as opposed to viewing them as a medical problem in need of fixing’, explains the 56-year-old surgeon to the Guardian.

‘Doctors often don’t have time to stop and think, so everything quickly gets reduced to the technical and mechanical. What I try to convey to students is that – as with a poem – each of their patients is unique,’ he emphasizes.

For his poetry course, Guimarães obtains his material from the British publisher Bloodaxe Books, to ensure every class has at least a handful of poems that link to medicine. Poems about doctor-patient scenarios or familiar healthcare settings offer students an easy bridge to their medical study. ‘I get students to look at poems that talk about empathy, compassion and solidarity.’

The reading list includes well-known poet-medics, like Júlio Denis (Portuguese surgeon), William Carlos Williams (American paediatrician), Gottfried Benn (German pathologist) and Miroslav Holub (Czech immunologist).    

Guimarães’s teaching is not limited to the most accomplished poets. He is a keen advocate of exposing students to the ‘evil’ of excessive sentimentalism, a habit they should avoid once they go to patients in the wards.

Since launching the course, Guimarães has received various requests to teach at other medical faculties across Portugal. Nor is he alone, Barcelona’s Pompeu Fabra University recently introduced a course in literature for its second-year medical students.

The poem Meditação (Contemplation) is from the collection Voçe está aqui (You are here, 2013)

The afternoon: I spent watching the war
on television. None of us are
missing
while in those places the missing are counted.
No one
of our generation was in the revolution. Others
(before us)
waged our wars (by the time
we arrived the war was over
when we came to fight
the dictator had fallen). The only thing
left for us was a
different kind of battles (lifting each
morning
the immense weight of your eyelids)
running for a place in the trench
of the bar.
All afternoon I watched the war
on the television (on this side of the
screen there is no hunger
nor cold).

Enjoy your week                                               Approveite a semana     







The Algarve houses the largest colony of Audouin’s gulls in the world

The Audouin’s gull is declining around the world but flourishing in the Algarve, establishing there the largest colony in the world. Year on year this threatened species has increased since settling in the Ria Formosa a decade ago. More than seven thousand nests were counted this year, three times more than in 2019 when the LIFE Ilhas Barreira project started.

This grey-legged gull is identified by its red bill and -unlike other species of gulls- continues to feed mainly on fish and rarely consumes waste from skips, bins or other types of human waste. Worldwide the species only breeds in a small number of colonies, which leaves it very vulnerable to human disturbance.

In Portugal, the Life Ilhas Barreira project – funded by the EU LIFE programme – has minimized this threat in the species’ main breeding colony, the Deserta/Barreta island. The results are visible. Not only has the breeding population of the Audouin’s gull increased every year, the species has expanded to the neighbouring island Culatra.

‘This new colony in Culatra provides more security for the future’, says Joana Andrade, coordinator of the LIFE project and the marine conservation department of the Portuguese Society for the Study of Birds (SPEA)
‘By safeguarding these areas, we guarantee that the birds have alternative places to nest in case of human disturbances or environmental changes’.

Another endangered bird as a result of habitat destruction is the owl. Only seven out of a possible 250 species worldwide can be found in Portugal. Owls generally breed in winter, making that season a more vocal and active season for them.

The Short-eared Owl (Coruja-do nabal) is between 34 to 43 cm in length and widely distributed across Portugal.

They mostly hunt in daytime when voles, their favourite meal, are active.

The Little Owl (Mocho galago) only measures 21-23 cm in length.
Except swooping down silently on their prey, they also hop around, pecking in search of insects, small reptiles and frogs.
They have the most extensive range and population of any owl in Portugal.

Euroasian Scops Owls (Mocho d’orelhas) are tiny owls – a little smaller than the Little Owls, measuring only 19 cm in length – that feed mainly on insects (crickets and beetles).

By contrast, the Euroasian Eagle Owl (Oehoe) is a top predator and the biggest in Europe, measuring 66 to 71 cm in length and a massive 2m wingspan. They prey on small mammals and birds and are at their most vocal in the autumn and winter, with the male’s territorial ‘oehoe’ call, deep and resonant.

Barn Owls (Suindara), 34 cm in length, tend to inhibit abandoned barns.
Farmers love them because they keep the property rodent-free.
Their screechy sound is more reminiscent of a hawk. They can carry prey up to 200 grams

The Long-eared Owls (Bufo pequeno), measuring around 34 to 40 cm, are also known as Cat Owls because of their cat-like facial features.
They are tough to spot. During the day, they usually hide upright against the trunk of a tree.

In urban areas – particularly in areas with wooded habitats – you may found Tawny Owls (Coruja-do-mato), circa 38 cm in length.
As nocturnal hunters, they remain silent on perches and locate their prey by hearing.

Owls are predators, developed to capture and kill. Under the feathers the owl has a sharp hooked beak and eight strong arched talons – sharp hooked claws, one per toe, four per leg – excellent ears and most can fly in absolute silence. They are best known for their typical hooting calls.
Young owls (owlets) leave the nest before they’re able to fly and climb into nearby branches using their beaks, claws and wings. Five to six weeks after they hatch they start flying and hunting on their own.


Enjoy the week            Approveite a semana               (pic PtRes/Eaglewatch)

‘Prime minister Luís Montenegro got himself into trouble’

Damaging soundbites in the media over business connections of the Prime Minister (PM) Luís Montenegro ( and other members of the executive) helped along by revelations in the renowned weekly newspaper Expresso that the PM’s family business Spinumviva receives a 4500 euros monthly retainer from the Solverde casino and hotels/spa franchise.

The weekly Sábado even goes further by suggesting that Montenegro’s Social Democratic Party (PSD) is creating a ‘familygate’, a scenario seeing numerous husbands, wives, cousins, sisters- and brothers-in-law promoted to high positions in government.

Political authorities have emphasized to give up on Spinumviva completely but this did not happen. Rui Rocha, leader of the liberal party (IL), stated that Montenegro has to decide ‘whether he wants to remain PM or to have a business, as the two things cannot be combined.‘

But it was the right-wing extremist party leader Ventura who further complicated the matter by saying ‘resign or present a motion of confidence, unless the Prime Minister is comfortable with being the new (corrupt) José Sócrates of Portuguese politics ’

Last Friday Montenegro declared that he is turning over his business to his sons without winding it up or giving up clients, something that various political parties had asked for. On Saturday night, the PM gave an address to the nation at the start of the news bulletins on TV, informing the country that he would be presenting a motion of confidence to Parliament.

However, by admitting a motion of confidence, he effectively puts the future of his minority government on even thinner ice as the country’s largest opposition party – the Socialists (PS) – are not willing to support this government and therefore cannot support a motion of confidence.

If the government falls, the country will be on its way to new elections – in a year which already has two election campaigns ahead – municipal elections in the autumn and presidential elections in early 2026 – at a time when Europe is in turmoil as a result of the US betrayal over Ukraine.

The shadow of the possible scenario of early elections though hovered over the country for just a few hours, when later that evening it turned out that no opposition party met the Prime Minister’s demand to admit a motion of confidence. Luís Montenegro was quick to consider this to be sufficient to continue governance. Nevertheless, the probability of early elections remains high.




Enjoy your week          Approveite a semana               (pic Sapo/Público)