Instructional Video13:29
TED Talks

Julian Burschka: What your breath could reveal about your health

12th - Higher Ed
There's no better way to stop a disease than to catch and treat it early, before symptoms occur. That's the whole point of medical screening techniques like radiography, MRIs and blood tests. But there's one medium with overlooked...
Instructional Video5:42
SciShow

When Sex Makes You Sick Post Orgasmic Illness Syndrome

12th - Higher Ed
Generally speaking, orgasms are pretty wonderful. But for some, they can be literally sickening.
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

The Key to an Artificial Heart ... and Open-Heart Surgery

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have been trying to pull blood out of the body and put it back in again since the early 1800s, but bypass machines haven't been easy to get right.
Instructional Video4:43
TED Talks

TED: The sore problem of prosthetic limbs | David Sengeh

12th - Higher Ed
What drove David Sengeh to create a more comfortable prosthetic limb? He grew up in Sierra Leone, and too many of the people he loves are missing limbs after the brutal civil war there. When he noticed that people who had prosthetics...
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 Video5:34
SciShow

When Your Brain Can’t Accept Reality: Anosognosia

12th - Higher Ed
If patients seem to be unaware of their obvious conditions and symptoms, it might not be that they're in denial, but their brain might actually prevent them from realizing their disabilities.
Instructional Video5:44
SciShow

When Waking up After Decades Turned out to Be Temporary

12th - Higher Ed
Around 1917, an unknown illness dubbed "sleeping sickness" caused people to suffer severe sleepiness and delirium. Some even became paralyzed for decades until a temporary cure was discovered in the 1960s. The story of this illness is...
Instructional Video11:05
TED Talks

TED: How augmented reality could change the future of surgery | Nadine Hachach-Haram

12th - Higher Ed
If you're undergoing surgery, you want the best surgical team to collaborate on your case, no matter where they are. Surgeon and entrepreneur Nadine Hachach-Haram is developing a new system that helps surgeons operate together and train...
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 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 Video5:02
SciShow

How a Century-Old Procedure Could Help Us Fight COVID-19

12th - Higher Ed
Some potentially good news on the COVID-19 treatment front: Thanks to a technique that’s more than a century old, recovered COVID-19 patients may be in a position to help the rest of us -- with their blood plasma.
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The left brain vs. right brain myth - Elizabeth Waters

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The human brain is visibly split into a left and right side. This structure has inspired one of the most pervasive ideas about the brain: that the left side controls logic and the right side controls creativity. And yet, this is a myth,...
Instructional Video4:07
TED Talks

Daniel Kraft: A better way to harvest bone marrow

12th - Higher Ed
Daniel Kraft demos his Marrow Miner -- a new device that quickly harvests life-saving bone marrow with minimal pain to the donor. He emphasizes that the adult stem cells found in bone marrow can be used to treat many terminal conditions,...
Instructional Video8:11
TED Talks

Akash Manoj: A life-saving device that detects silent heart attacks

12th - Higher Ed
You probably know the common symptoms of a heart attack: chest and arm pain, shortness of breath and fatigue. But there's another kind that's just as deadly and harder to detect because the symptoms are silent. In this quick talk,...
Instructional Video9:50
TED Talks

Matt Beane: How do we learn to work with intelligent machines?

12th - Higher Ed
The path to skill around the globe has been the same for thousands of years: train under an expert and take on small, easy tasks before progressing to riskier, harder ones. But right now, we're handling AI in a way that blocks that path...
Instructional Video2:41
SciShow

What Happens If You Leave Stitches in for Too Long?

12th - Higher Ed
Leaving your stitches in too long can have some serious consequences.
Instructional Video7:47
SciShow

The Women Who Killed Whooping Cough

12th - Higher Ed
Whooping cough used to infect hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. and kill thousands of children every year. Join us as we learn about the women who developed the vaccine that has since saved thousands of lives.
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

Cutting Beef Could Reduce Emissions. No, Like, a Lot

12th - Higher Ed
Switching from beef to a specific kind of vegetarian protein just once a week could have huge environmental benefits, according to a study out this week in Nature. And, in a study in Nature Communications, researchers in the US have...
Instructional Video5:46
TED Talks

Kenneth Shinozuka: My simple invention, designed to keep my grandfather safe

12th - Higher Ed
60% of people with dementia wander off, an issue that can prove hugely stressful for both patients and caregivers. In this charming talk, hear how teen inventor Kenneth Shinozuka came up with a novel solution to help his night-wandering...
Instructional Video11:51
TED Talks

TED: A few ways to fix a government | Charity Wayua

12th - Higher Ed
Charity Wayua put her skills as a cancer researcher to use on an unlikely patient: the government of her native Kenya. She shares how she helped her government drastically improve its process for opening up new businesses, a crucial part...
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

We're Getting Closer to Real-Life Tricorders

12th - Higher Ed
Many of us have longed for cool sci-fi inventions like a holodeck or replicators, but there's one tool we're actually getting pretty darn close to creating: the medical tricorder.
Instructional Video7:53
TED Talks

Samuel Cohen: Alzheimer's is not normal aging — and we can cure it

12th - Higher Ed
More than 40 million people worldwide suffer from Alzheimer's disease, and that number is expected to increase drastically in the coming years. But no real progress has been made in the fight against the disease since its classification...
Instructional Video17:07
TED Talks

TED: What happens when you have a disease doctors can't diagnose | Jennifer Brea

12th - Higher Ed
Five years ago, TED Fellow Jennifer Brea became progressively ill with myalgic encephalomyelitis, commonly known as chronic fatigue syndrome, a debilitating illness that severely impairs normal activities and on bad days makes even the...
Instructional Video6:33
TED Talks

Andrew Bastawrous: Get your next eye exam on a smartphone

12th - Higher Ed
Thirty-nine million people in the world are blind, and the majority lost their sight due to curable and preventable diseases. But how do you test and treat people who live in remote areas, where expensive, bulky eye equipment is hard to...