Instructional Video7:54
SciShow

Chemo Sucks. Science Is Changing That

12th - Higher Ed
We use chemotherapy because it works, but no one has ever come home from chemo treatment and gone "That was fun!" Let's look at the new targeted therapies and personalized treatments for cancer that doctors are developing for clinical use.
Instructional Video4:08
SciShow

The Tiny Fish That's Changing Modern Medicine

12th - Higher Ed
The little fish Danio rerio holds secrets to understanding how vertebrates develop, how diseases like cancer work, and how we might one day learn how to regenerate human heart tissue.
Instructional Video6:04
SciShow

Have We Discovered a Cure for Cancer... on Accident?

12th - Higher Ed
Is there actually a cure for cancer? A universal cure would be a truly historic achievement in medicine, and it seems that scientists may have found it... by accident. Watch this new episode of SciShow and find out more! Hosted by: Hank...
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 Video4:48
SciShow

Two New Groundbreaking Cancer Treatments

12th - Higher Ed
Finding safe, effective cancer treatments is tough, but in the last couple of weeks, we've taken two major steps toward a future where every type of cancer has a cure.
Instructional Video15:09
TED Talks

Carl June: A "living drug" that could change the way we treat cancer

12th - Higher Ed
Carl June is the pioneer behind CAR T-cell therapy: a groundbreaking cancer treatment that supercharges part of a patient's own immune system to attack and kill tumors. In a talk about a breakthrough, he shares how three decades of...
Instructional Video5:13
SciShow

Personalized Cancer Treatment Just Got Harder

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists are working to develop personalized cancer treatments, but one obstacle in the way is figuring out how different cells react to one another.
Instructional Video17:23
TED Talks

Suleika Jaouad: What almost dying taught me about living

12th - Higher Ed
"The hardest part of my cancer experience began once the cancer was gone," says author Suleika Jaouad. In this fierce, funny, wisdom-packed talk, she challenges us to think beyond the divide between "sick" and "well," asking: How do you...
Instructional Video4:32
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What is leukemia? - Danilo Allegra and Dania Puggioni

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Stem cells found in the bone marrow are crucial for our health because they are needed to become new blood cells that sustain and protect our bodies. But when the transformation goes wrong, harmful mutations can cause the cells to start...
Instructional Video4:10
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What are stem cells? - Craig A. Kohn

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Is personalized medicine for individual bodies in our future? Possibly -- with the use of stem cells, undifferentiated cells with the power to become any tissue in our bodies. Craig A. Kohn describes the role of these incredible,...
Instructional Video5:12
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How does chemotherapy work? | Hyunsoo Joshua No

Pre-K - Higher Ed
During World War I, scientists were trying to develop an antidote to the poisonous yellow cloud known as mustard gas. They discovered the gas was irrevocably damaging the bone marrow of affected soldiers. This gave the scientists an...
Instructional Video7:54
SciShow

4 Plants That Are Great for Humans

12th - Higher Ed
A quarter of all prescription drugs in the U.S. come from substances that are found only in plants. In this episode of SciShow, we take a look at four of these talented plants who make our lives better.
Instructional Video5:26
Curated Video

Why Heart Cancer Is So Rare It (Almost) Never Happens

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The heart is practically immune to getting cancer. 2 in 100,000 of those who have cancer are those with a primary cancer of the heart. That is an astonishing low number. So, what is so special about the heart that it rarely, if ever,...
Instructional Video0:08
Instructional Video6:19
Science360

Human geneticist and leukemia research pioneer, Dr. Janet Rowley discusses her career

12th - Higher Ed
Janet Rowley was an American human geneticist and the first scientist to identify a chromosomal translocation as the cause of leukemia and other cancers. She received the National Medal of Science 1998. As a medalist, this year she...
Instructional Video4:56
Curated Video

Disorders of Leukocytes/White Blood Cells - An Overview

Higher Ed
Leukocytes or White Blood cells are very important cells in your blood. They function primarily as the defenders of the body, protecting your body when things go wrong or when foreign invaders like bacteria or parasites try to cause...
News Clip2:22
Curated Video

FDA Advisers Reviewed a Sickle Cell Treatment

Higher Ed
The Food and Drug Administration says there’s an unmet need for help for patients suffering from severe sickle cell anemia. A new drug that uses gene editing could solve that.
Stock Footage0:12
Getty Images

HD: Young Man Receiving Chemotherapy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Young man receiving chemotherapy. Focus is on IV bottle with chemotherapy, his girlfriend entering the scene and focus change to them, she kiss him in a cheek and embracing him and smiling and looking at camera.
Stock Footage0:11
Getty Images

Little Boy Chemotherapy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Little boy and his teddy bear after a chemotherapy treatment
Stock Footage0:09
Getty Images

Little Boy Chemotherapy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Little boy and his teddy bear after a chemotherapy treatment
Stock Footage0:17
Getty Images

Little Boy Chemotherapy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Little boy and his teddy bear after a chemotherapy treatment
Stock Footage0:19
Getty Images

HD: Cancer Patient Testimonial

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Young Man Having an chemotherapy treatment at home, testimonial shot, zoom in effect to his face expressing positivity about whole situation.
Stock Footage0:09
Getty Images

Inaugural Celebrity Rock N Bowl Event Presented By the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Amy Yasbeck at the Inaugural Celebrity Rock N Bowl Event Presented By the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society at Lucky Strike Lanes in Hollywood, California on April 14, 2005. (Footage by WireImage Video/Getty Images)
Stock Footage0:12
Getty Images

Little Boy Picking Oranges

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A little boy standing next to an orange tree with his teddy bear, wearing a bandana to cover the loss of hair from cancer treatment (chemotherapy).