Instructional Video5:31
SciShow

The Trouble with This Year's Flu Season

12th - Higher Ed
We here at SciShow know of two things that can help you get through this flu season: a flu shot, and watching this video. Make sure you do both! Hosted by: Hank Green
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

Why Do We Get Colds When It's Cold?

12th - Higher Ed
The temperature drops and you're more likely to get a cold: Is this correlation or causation?
News Clip3:06
Curated Video

Children in hospital with suspected bird flu

Higher Ed
1. Wide exterior of hospital 2. Corridor in ward 3. Various of medical staff in protective clothing 4. Various of children with suspected bird flu in ward 5. Set-up shot of Hoang Thuy Long, director of Vietnam's National Institute of...
News Clip1:32
Curated Video

Mexico imposes ban on US chicken imports

Higher Ed
1. Wide shot of press conference 2. Close up of presentation slide 3. Cutaway of reporters 4. Wide shot of speakers 5. SOUNDBTIE (Spanish) Dr. Javier Trujillo, National Health and Agricultural Services Director: "This illness that has...
Instructional Video2:34
SciShow

Why Can Mosquitoes Transmit Zika, But Not the Flu?

12th - Higher Ed
Mosquitoes transmit a number of terrible diseases like malaria, West Nile virus, and the Zika virus, but why not the flu?
Instructional Video5:33
SciShow

Breast Cancer gets Worse in the Spring and Fall. But...Why?

12th - Higher Ed
Seasonal illnesses from infectious diseases aren’t a new concept, but a few decades ago public health experts began to notice the same behavior in some non-infectious diseases like breast cancer. These patterns have helped us learn a lot...
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

How Studying Bacteria Almost Kept Us From Discovering the Flu

12th - Higher Ed
Today we know pathogens -- viruses, bacteria, and certain other microbes -- are responsible for many diseases. But linking specific diseases to the microbes that cause them has been surprisingly tricky, and some research practices lead...
Instructional Video41:27
SciShow

How Science Got Us to 2020 | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
As we forge ahead into the new year, let’s take some time to thank the intrepid researchers, volunteers, and even the occasional dog who came before us, made sure our food and drugs are free from poison, and built the devices that make...
Instructional Video2:40
SciShow

Good News, & Drinking Pigs

12th - Higher Ed
The SciShow Science News Bureau brings us some GOOD news this week - Hank tells us about a newly developed vaccine for dengue fever, a newly discovered monkey species in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and some happy pigs drinking...
Instructional Video2:57
SciShow

Why Do We Get Colds When It's Cold?

12th - Higher Ed
The temperature drops and you're more likely to get a cold: Is this correlation or causation?
Instructional Video6:11
SciShow

How To Make a Mutant Flu

12th - Higher Ed
Hank dishes out updates on the mutant flu virus and the James Webb Space Telescope, and gives us some new bits about new exoplanets, secret space planes, and a study that shows that music evolves according to Darwin's rules.
Instructional Video5:34
SciShow

The Trouble with This Year's Flu Season

12th - Higher Ed
We here at SciShow know of two things that can help you get through this flu season: a flu shot, and watching this video. Make sure you do both!
Instructional Video4:13
SciShow

Female Viagra' & New Insights Into Narcolepsy

12th - Higher Ed
Recent research has offered some new insights into our biochemistry -- from a proposed drug for sexual arousal to a possible link between the flu and narcolepsy.
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

FAQs About the New Flu

12th - Higher Ed
In today's news, Michael Aranda stands in for Hank to talk about this year's flu season. And no, Hank isn't out sick with the flu - he's on the road and out of the studio for a few weeks!
Instructional Video3:11
SciShow

Do Surgical Masks Protect You from Viruses?

12th - Higher Ed
You often see people wearing surgical masks or respirators during flu season, but do they even do anything?
Instructional Video5:41
SciShow

Retracing a Mastodon’s Steps With Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to strontium, oxygen, and rings in a tusk, scientists now have evidence that extinct mastodons may have participated in yearly migrations.
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

Could we Have Universal Flu Vaccine?

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers are developing a flu vaccine with the potential to target many different strains at once. Also, bacterial meningitis may have something to do with special RNA.
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

Why Do We Need Yearly Flu Shots, but Not Measles Shots?

12th - Higher Ed
Unlike measles, Influenza requires a fresh shot of vaccines every year. But why?
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

Will There Ever be a Cure for the Common Cold?

12th - Higher Ed
Medicine has made leaps and bounds in treating illnesses in the last century, but are they ever going to get around to curing the common cold? We might be closer than you think.
Instructional Video10:56
SciShow

6 Dangerous Diseases Hiding in U.S. Backyards

12th - Higher Ed
Microbes are all around us, on everything we touch, drink, or eat. While most microbes can't hurt us, you don't have to go much farther than your own backyard to find some that really can! Chapters PLAGUE 0:39 TULAREMIA 4:48...
Instructional Video3:53
SciShow Kids

Colds, the Flu, and You

K - 5th
When the weather starts to get cool, a lot of people start to get sick. So what’s making people sick and how can you avoid falling ill? Join Jessi and Squeaks to find out!
Instructional Video5:47
SciShow

The 1918 Pandemic: The Deadliest Flu in History

12th - Higher Ed
The science behind why the 1918 flu is “the mother of all pandemics” continues to challenge scientists today. Olivia sheds some light on why this flu was so powerful and what we learned from it.
Instructional Video14:27
SciShow Kids

Why Do We Get Sick?

K - 5th
Getting a cold or flu can be sort of scary. But sometimes the more you know about something, the less scary it is!
Instructional Video2:11
Curated Video

Pandemic Viruses

6th - 12th
Pandemic viruses can spread around the world. Viruses invade our bodies destroying cells and infecting others, but how do they do it? Biology - Cells And DNA - Learning Points. Viruses are deadly, contagious and can spread easily around...