Maren Grainger-Monsen

Maren Grainger-Monsen

Biographie

Maren Grainger-Monsen, a physician and award-winning filmmaker, is Filmmaker in Residence and Director of the Program in Bioethics and Film at the Stanford University Center for Biomedical Ethics. She studied film at the London International Film School and received her medical training at the University of Washington and Stanford University School of Medicine. Grainger-Monsen's film, Hold Your Breath, follows the dramatic story of an Afghan refugee family through cultural conflicts over medical treatment. It was broadcast on national PBS beginning in April of 2007. It was featured in a Newsweek magazine special issue on family medicine in an article entitled, When Cultures Clash, as well as in an ABC World News Tonight with the late Peter Jennings, and won the 2007 Wilbur Award from the Religion Communicators Council.

Hold Your Breath developed out of Grainger-Monsen's project, Worlds Apart, a series of award-winning short films on cross-cultural medicine developed for medical education that have met with an overwhelmingly positive reception. The films are being used in over 750 institutions nationally, including 40% of all US medical schools, as well as for internal staff training at important medical accrediting organizations such as JCAHO and the AMA. They have also been instrumental in policy reform, such as playing a role in the UNOS Board of Directors' decision to increase minority access to kidney transplants by revision allocation priority for tissue matching.

Grainger-Monsen's work includes The Vanishing Line, a chronicle of her journey toward understanding the art and issues of dying, which was broadcast in 1998 on the national PBS Point of View series and again in an encore showing in 2000. The film has won numerous prestigious awards, including an Emmy Award nomination, as well as First Place at the Nashville Independent Film Festival and Program of the Year Award from the National Hospice Organization. It was also chosen to represent the United States in 1999 at INPUT, an annual screening event of the best and most provocative documentary films from around the world. Grainger-Monsen's other films include Where the Highway Ends: Rural Healthcare in Crisis, which won an Emmy Award, and Grave Words, which was awarded first place in the American Medical Association Film Festival.

Icarus Films

Réalisatrice

Documentaires
2013

The Revolutionary Optimists