Tortosa Hospital Launches Photography Contest to Connect Health and Environment

The initiative, part of the center's 50th anniversary, aims to foster reflection on the interdependence between the environment and public well-being.

Generic image of a natural landscape with a camera lens.
IA

Generic image of a natural landscape with a camera lens.

Marking World Environment Day and its 50th anniversary, the Verge de la Cinta University Hospital of Tortosa (HUTVC) has launched a photography contest to highlight the connection between health and the natural environment.

Coinciding with World Environment Day on June 5th and its 50th anniversary, the Verge de la Cinta University Hospital of Tortosa (HUTVC) has launched a photography contest open to the public and professionals of the Catalan Health Institute (ICS). This initiative, supported by the Rovira i Virgili University and the natural parks of Els Ports and the Ebre Delta, aims to showcase the close relationship between the environment and health, promoting shared reflection on their interdependence.
The contest invites participants to capture scenes and realities from the region that demonstrate how the natural environment impacts people's well-being. Photography serves as a medium to collectively explain the importance of caring for the environment as a foundation for a healthy life, with an accessible and educational approach for everyone.
The competition is structured into two categories, one for ICS professionals and another for the general public, aiming to gather diverse perspectives. Each participant can submit up to three original photographs, in color or black and white, aligned with the proposed theme.
Submissions opened on June 5th and will close on September 15th. Photographs must be submitted digitally, accompanied by a title that reinforces their message. The selected images will be part of an exhibition celebrating the center's 50th anniversary, to be displayed in healthcare and institutional spaces across the Terres de l'Ebre, contributing to creating more human and locally connected environments.
Through this initiative, the organizing institutions are promoting a view of health that extends beyond clinical care, incorporating environmental, community, and cultural dimensions, in a clear commitment to advancing towards a broader model of well-being.