Instructional Video7:05
SciShow

There's a Single-Celled Dog

12th - Higher Ed
Is it possible for there to be a dog that is made of one very determined cell?
Instructional Video2:58
SciShow

Seeing Sick Birds Boosts Canaries’ Immune Responses

12th - Higher Ed
Unlike humans, domestic canaries don’t have the option of social distancing when one of their own is ill. But canaries may have evolved a nifty workaround for protecting their populations when disease strikes!
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

How Measles Vaccines Protect You From Other Diseases

12th - Higher Ed
Since measles vaccines started making their rounds, child mortality has dropped by up to 90% percent in some countries. That’s more than you’d expect if the measles vaccine just prevented deaths from measles. Can science explain this...
Instructional Video9:47
SciShow

7 Organs You Could Totally Live Without

12th - Higher Ed
Most people know that they don't need their appendix, but what other organs can humans live without?
Instructional Video18:04
TED Talks

TED: The breakthrough science of mRNA medicine | Melissa J. Moore

12th - Higher Ed
The secret behind medicine that uses messenger RNA (or mRNA) is that it "teaches" our bodies how to fight diseases on our own, leading to groundbreaking treatments for COVID-19 and, potentially one day, cancer, the flu and other ailments...
Instructional Video11:50
SciShow

Why It Actually Took 50 Years to Make COVID mRNA Vaccines

12th - Higher Ed
The FDA recently approved two mRNA vaccines for COVID-19, but it was a challenge to make this type of vaccine work. And it took decades of research to get us to the point where scientists could make those vaccines as quickly as they did.
Instructional Video4:54
SciShow

Toxic Shock Syndrome: Way Beyond Tampons

12th - Higher Ed
If you've heard of Toxic Shock Syndrome, you might think you can only get it from tampons, but the bacteria that cause this problem are surprisingly common and we still don't know why they sometimes turn deadly.
Instructional Video5:11
SciShow

Immune NETs: What COVID and Snake Venoms Have in Common

12th - Higher Ed
When faced with threats ranging from snake bites to COVID infections, some white blood cells retaliate with a peculiar tactic: spewing out their own DNA to form pathogen-trapping nets. But research suggests that sometimes this...
Instructional Video4:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What causes yeast infections, and how do you get rid of them? | Liesbeth Demuyser

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The vagina harbors hundreds of different kinds of microorganisms. Candida yeasts are usually present in small quantities and most of the time, these fungi are harmless. But, under certain conditions, Candida yeasts can cause infections....
Instructional Video20:58
TED Talks

Seth Berkley: HIV and flu -- the vaccine strategy

12th - Higher Ed
Seth Berkley explains how smart advances in vaccine design, production and distribution are bringing us closer than ever to eliminating a host of global threats -- from AIDS to malaria to flu pandemics.
Instructional Video2:39
MinuteEarth

How Your Dog Can Protect You Before You're Born

12th - Higher Ed
Herein we explain how pets can help your immune system, beginning when you're in utero!
Instructional Video4:04
SciShow

Why Don't All Blue Whales Have Cancer?

12th - Higher Ed
Do larger creatures get cancer more frequently?
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 Video5:31
SciShow

The Truth About COVID Vaccines and Emergency Use Authorizations

12th - Higher Ed
The news of several promising COVID-19 vaccines over the past few weeks has been very exciting, but so far, none have received emergency authorization for general use in the US. We'll talk about what that means, and also, why these...
Instructional Video24:50
TED Talks

TED: Meet the scientist couple driving an mRNA vaccine revolution | Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci

12th - Higher Ed
As COVID-19 spread, BioNTech cofounders Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci had one goal: to make a safe, effective vaccine faster than ever before. In this illuminating conversation with head of TED Chris Anderson, the immunologists (and...
Instructional Video16:20
TED Talks

Cynthia Kenyon: Experiments that hint of longer lives

12th - Higher Ed
What controls aging? Biochemist Cynthia Kenyon has found a simple genetic mutation that can double the lifespan of a simple worm, C. elegans. The lessons from that discovery, and others, are pointing to how we might one day significantly...
Instructional Video2:14
SciShow

What's the Deal with Warts?

12th - Higher Ed
On today's Quick Question, we absolve the poor, humble toad of its wart-giving reputation. Learn about the virus that causes warts, how they spread, and what you can do to get rid of them.
Instructional Video11:25
TED Talks

TED: What the sugar coating on your cells is trying to tell you | Carolyn Bertozzi

12th - Higher Ed
Your cells are coated with sugars that store information and speak a secret language. What are they trying to tell us? Your blood type, for one -- and, potentially, that you have cancer. Chemical biologist Carolyn Bertozzi researches how...
Instructional Video5:15
SciShow

Why Are COVID Fatality Rates Dropping?

12th - Higher Ed
Near the end of 2020, we got some puzzling but good news: COVID-19 fatality rates have been dropping. Here are a few factors that might help explain why we’re seeing this trend.
Instructional Video3:14
SciShow

How Anglerfishes Become One With Their Partners

12th - Higher Ed
Anglerfishes are pretty unique creatures, but what’s really unique is how some of these species mate.
Instructional Video10:31
TED Talks

TED: Could you recover from illness ... using your own stem cells? | Nabiha Saklayen

12th - Higher Ed
What if diseases could be treated with a patient's own cells, precisely and on demand? Biotech entrepreneur Nabiha Saklayen explains how we could harness advances in biology, machine learning and lasers to create personalized stem cell...
Instructional Video4:00
SciShow

Jimmy Carters Cancer Cure

12th - Higher Ed
In August 2015, Jimmy Carter announced that he had a form of cancer that spread to his liver and brain. A few months later he reported the cancer was gone. How?
Instructional Video9:29
SciShow

The Messy Path to the First Successful Organ Transplants

12th - Higher Ed
Today, the organ transplantation is one of the well-known medical treatment, but the road to the first successful organ transplant was full of challenges, discoveries, and a whole lot of work.
Instructional Video31:10
SciShow

Disease Ecology | SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Dr. Angie Luis is here to tell Hank about wildlife that spread diseases to humans, and Jessi brings some wildlife that don’t.