News Clip9:17
PBS

Following The Way Of Love Through Divisions, Upheaval And Uncertainty

12th - Higher Ed
The Most Rev. Michael Curry is the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church of the U.S. His latest book "Love is the Way: Holding Onto Hope in Troubling Times," reveals how love fueled his journey from descendant of slaves to the top...
News Clip5:23
PBS

Why Americans are lonelier and its effects on our health

12th - Higher Ed
According to U.S. Census Bureau surveys, Americans have been spending less time with friends and more time alone since before the pandemic, which has only intensified the sense of social isolation. Laurie Santos, a cognitive scientist...
Instructional Video10:50
Crash Course

What Is Outbreak Culture? Crash Course Outbreak Science

12th - Higher Ed
When we think of how we respond to outbreaks, we often think of physical things like vaccines or medicines, but there is another factor that is just as critical to understand: culture! Culture determines how we collaborate and use the...
Instructional Video14:52
TED Talks

TED: How COVID-19 transformed the future of medicine | Daniel Kraft

12th - Higher Ed
The pandemic forced the world to work together like never before and, with unprecedented speed, bore a new age of health and medical innovation. Physician-scientist Daniel Kraft explains how breakthroughs and advancements like AI-infused...
Instructional Video10:53
Crash Course

How Do We Know We're Sick? Crash Course Outbreak Science

12th - Higher Ed
Sometimes, diagnosing patients is pretty easy, but other times... not so much. Luckily, in a medical setting we have tools that can help us figure out what's wrong with patients, and how to help them. In this episode of Crash Course...
Instructional Video12:37
SciShow

5 Times People Gave Animals Diseases | Reverse Zoonotics

12th - Higher Ed
Usually when we think about animals and disease, we think about illnesses that they transmit to us - like swine flu or Lyme disease. But illness is often a two-way street, and while animals can pass pathogens to us, we can also pass our...
Instructional Video28:29
TED Talks

TED: Is the pandemic actually over? It's complicated | Anthony Fauci

12th - Higher Ed
Be spreaders of facts and truths, says scientist and immunologist Dr. Anthony Fauci. Having advised seven US presidents on various disease outbreaks including COVID-19, he shares insights on the present and future of pandemics, backed up...
Instructional Video10:38
Crash Course

How Does Public Health Tackle Outbreaks? Crash Course Outbreak Science

12th - Higher Ed
Public health activities are all the ways society coordinates to deliver better health to people. That may sound super broad, and it is, so in this episode of Crash Course Outbreak Science, we'll take a look at public health works to...
Instructional Video29:51
TED Talks

TED: COVID-19 unraveled the workforce. Here's how to fix it | Mary L. Gray

12th - Higher Ed
We are living through the tech-enabled unraveling of full-time employment itself, says anthropologist Mary L. Gray. As the pandemic exposes and accelerates the shift to on-demand online labor, Gray takes us inside the jobs being created...
Instructional Video6:36
TED Talks

TED: 5 needs that any COVID-19 response should meet | Kwame Owusu-Kesse

12th - Higher Ed
Crisis interventions often focus on a single aspect of a big, complicated problem, failing to address the broader social and economic context. Kwame Owusu-Kesse describes how the Harlem Children's Zone is taking a more holistic approach...
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

How Do mRNA Vaccines Work?

12th - Higher Ed
Two of the vaccines we have for COVID-19 have the distinction of being the first mRNA vaccines to see widespread use in humans. But how do they work, and how are they different from the litany of immunizations you probably got as a kid?
Instructional Video11:16
TED Talks

Ellen 't Hoen: Pool medical patents, save lives

12th - Higher Ed
Patenting a new drug helps finance its immense cost to develop -- but that same patent can put advanced treatments out of reach for sick people in developing nations, at deadly cost. Ellen 't Hoen talks about an elegant, working solution...
Instructional Video11:03
TED Talks

TED: How to fix broken supply chains | Dustin Burke

12th - Higher Ed
Supply chain challenges are real, but they're not new, says global trade expert Dustin Burke. In the face of disruptions ranging from natural disasters to pandemics, how do we make sure supply chains can keep up? Burke offers a...
Instructional Video10:31
SciShow

6 Ways Animals Prevent Epidemics

12th - Higher Ed
Humans aren’t the only ones who have to worry about epidemics: meet six other animals who take their own precautions to avoid getting sick! Chapters pathogens 0:40 vectors 1:15 VECTOR AVOIDANCE: BLUEBIRDS 2:19 social immunity 3:35...
Instructional Video5:43
TED Talks

The shadow pandemic of domestic violence during COVID-19 | Kemi DaSilva-Ibru

12th - Higher Ed
Mandatory lockdowns, quarantines and shelter-in-place orders meant to contain COVID-19 have created a shadow pandemic of domestic abuse, says physician Kemi DaSilva-Ibru. Sharing alarming statistics on the rise of gender-based violence...
Instructional Video12:42
TED Talks

TED: The tiny balls of fat that could revolutionize medicine | Kathryn A. Whitehead

12th - Higher Ed
What if you were holding life-saving medicine ... but had no way to administer it? Zoom down to the nano level with engineer Kathryn A. Whitehead as she gives a breakdown of the little fatty balls (called lipid nanoparticles) perfectly...
Instructional Video11:40
Crash Course

How Can Cooperation End an Outbreak? Crash Course Outbreak Science

12th - Higher Ed
In 1959, the WHO set out to eradicate smallpox, an ambitious goal that was achieved by 1980. But this goal wouldn't have been possible without coordination on all levels of society. In this episode of Crash Course Outbreak Science, we'll...
Instructional Video7:55
SciShow

Does Getting COVID-19 Make You Immune to It? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Like a common cold or a cold sore, would it be possible to get a reinfection of COVID-19? Would we be able to build up long-term resistance to it?
Instructional Video10:08
TED Talks

TED: Remembering climate change ... a message from the year 2071 | Kim Stanley Robinson

12th - Higher Ed
Coming to us from 50 years in the future, legendary sci-fi writer Kim Stanley Robinson tells the "history" of how humanity ended the climate crisis and restored the damage done to Earth's biosphere. A rousing vision of how we might unite...
Instructional Video2:36
MinuteEarth

An Unexpected Consequence of COVID

12th - Higher Ed
The global pandemic led to a drop in outdoor air pollution, but it also led to an increase in indoor air pollution - and our exposure to it.
Instructional Video7:59
SciShow

Why Don't We Have Better and Faster COVID-19 Tests? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
The next wave of COVID tests take advantage of some really cool molecular biology. They can be run by hospitals and doctors on-site, and many turn around results in an hour or less!
Instructional Video4:59
SciShow

Kids, Kawasaki Disease, and COVID-19: What Parents Should Know

12th - Higher Ed
While children are only a small minority of those who test positive for COVID-19, we’re starting to see evidence of a rare, but serious, complication in children that resembles a condition known as Kawasaki disease. Here’s what doctors...
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

Poop: Our Newest Ally in the Fight Against COVID-19?

12th - Higher Ed
Right now, scientists need additional COVID-19 monitoring methods. And our poops might help!
Instructional Video5:59
SciShow

Finally, a Drug That Helps With the Worst COVID-19 Infections

12th - Higher Ed
A bit of good news on the COVID-19 front this week: New research reveals a drug that might actually help save severely ill patients, and data suggests that distancing policies may have saved millions of lives over the last few months.