Instructional Video5:08
Be Smart

Venomous Creatures: The Evolution and Impact of Animal Venoms

12th - Higher Ed
Venom comes in all different types, so here's everything you'll ever need to know.
Instructional Video3:12
SciShow

What Happens If You Stop Pooping?

12th - Higher Ed
Constipation is no fun. Luckily, it can usually be remedied with a handful of prunes, a few cups of coffee, and some patience. However, if you don't poop for a long, long time, constipation can develop into some serious health problems.
Instructional Video11:31
SciShow

Antihistamines for Everything?

12th - Higher Ed
When you think of antihistamines, you're probably only thinking about getting rid of a runny nose, but we're learning that antihistamines can be used for nausea, insomnia, and even depression!
Instructional Video3:11
TED Talks

Dean Ornish: Your genes are not your fate

12th - Higher Ed
Dean Ornish shares new research that shows how adopting healthy lifestyle habits can affect a person at a genetic level. For instance, he says, when you live healthier, eat better, exercise, and love more, your brain cells actually...
Instructional Video16:49
TED Talks

Dean Ornish: Healing through diet

12th - Higher Ed
Dean Ornish talks about simple, low-tech and low-cost ways to take advantage of the body's natural desire to heal itself.
Instructional Video18:49
TED Talks

Catherine Mohr: Surgery's past, present and robotic future

12th - Higher Ed
Surgeon and inventor Catherine Mohr tours the history of surgery (and its pre-painkiller, pre-antiseptic past), then demos some of the newest tools for surgery through tiny incisions, performed using nimble robot hands. Fascinating --...
Instructional Video13:08
TED Talks

TED: How barbershops can keep men healthy | Joseph Ravenell

12th - Higher Ed
The barbershop can be a safe haven for black men, a place for honest conversation and trust -- and, as physician Joseph Ravenell suggests, a good place to bring up tough topics about health. He's turning the barbershop into a place to...
Instructional Video13:56
TED Talks

TED: The radical possibilities of man-made DNA | Floyd E. Romesberg

12th - Higher Ed
Every cell that's ever lived has been the result of the four-letter genetic alphabet: A, T, C and G -- the basic units of DNA. But now that's changed. In a visionary talk, synthetic biologist Floyd E. Romesberg introduces us to the first...
Instructional Video4:59
TED Talks

TED: How AI is making it easier to diagnose disease | Pratik Shah

12th - Higher Ed
Today's AI algorithms require tens of thousands of expensive medical images to detect a patient's disease. What if we could drastically reduce the amount of data needed to train an AI, making diagnoses low-cost and more effective? TED...
Instructional Video17:24
TED Talks

Thulasiraj Ravilla: How low-cost eye care can be world-class

12th - Higher Ed
India's revolutionary Aravind Eye Care System has given sight to millions. Thulasiraj Ravilla looks at the ingenious approach that drives its treatment costs down and quality up, and why its methods should trigger a re-think of all human...
Instructional Video13:10
Crash Course

The Skeletal System: It's ALIVE! - CrashCourse Biology

12th - Higher Ed
Hank introduces us to the framework of our bodies, our skeleton, which apart from being the support and protection for all our fleshy parts, is involved in many other vital processes that help our bodies to function properly.
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

Space Medicine: What We Need and What We Have

12th - Higher Ed
If we're going to send astronauts out to Mars someday, we'll need to figure out how to send a pharmacy with them
Instructional Video9:14
Amoeba Sisters

Antibiotics, Antivirals, and Vaccines

12th - Higher Ed
Explore the basics of how antibiotics, antivirals, and vaccines work to help your immune system in the fight against pathogens! This Amoeba Sisters video also briefly introduces the lines of defense in the immune system and discusses how...
Instructional Video26:52
SciShow

Precision Medicine | SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Erica Woodahl tells us how individual genetic screenings could help doctors prescribe better medications and Jessi from Animal Wonders brings in two fantastic rodents: Huckleberry the beaver and Chili Pepper the Patagonian cavy. Chapters...
Instructional Video4:17
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why haven't we cured arthritis? | Kaitlyn Sadtler and Heather J. Faust

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The bad backs, elbow pain, and creaky knees so common in older people often aren't just "old age." In fact, the source of this stiffness plagues many young people as well. The culprit is arthritis: a condition that affects over 90...
Instructional Video4:43
TED Talks

Jane Chen: A warm embrace that saves lives

12th - Higher Ed
In the developing world, access to incubators is limited by cost and distance, and millions of premature babies die each year. TED Fellow Jane Chen shows an invention that could keep millions of these infants warm -- a design that's...
Instructional Video19:25
TED Talks

Brian Goldman: Doctors make mistakes. Can we talk about that?

12th - Higher Ed
Every doctor makes mistakes. But, says physician Brian Goldman, medicine's culture of denial (and shame) keeps doctors from ever talking about those mistakes, or using them to learn and improve. Telling stories from his own long...
Instructional Video12:05
SciShow

How to Make a COVID-19 Vaccine

12th - Higher Ed
One year to eighteen months might seem like a while to wait for a COVID-19 vaccine, but there's a good reason finding and approving a candidate takes a whole lot of time.
Instructional Video5:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why plague doctors wore beaked masks | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The year is 1656. Your body is wracked by violent chills. Your head pounds and you're too weak to sit up. In your feverish state, you see a strange-looking man wearing a beak-like mask, his body covered from head to toe. Without seeing...
Instructional Video14:17
TED Talks

TED: The agony of opioid withdrawal -- and what doctors should tell patients about it | Travis Rieder

12th - Higher Ed
The United States accounts for five percent of the world's population but consumes almost 70 percent of the total global opioid supply, creating an epidemic that has resulted in tens of thousands of deaths each year. How did we get here,...
Instructional Video12:52
TED Talks

TED: The secrets of spider venom | Michel Dugon

12th - Higher Ed
Spider venom can stop your heart within minutes, cause unimaginable pain -- and potentially save your life, says zoologist Michel Dugon. As a tarantula crawls up and down his arm, Dugon explains the medical properties of this potent...
Instructional Video11:09
TED Talks

Roger Stein: A bold new way to fund drug research

12th - Higher Ed
Believe it or not, about 20 years' worth of potentially life-saving drugs are sitting in labs right now, untested. Why? Because they can't get the funding to go to trials; the financial risk is too high. Roger Stein is a finance guy, and...
Instructional Video7:52
TED Talks

Peter van Manen: Better baby care -- thanks to Formula 1

12th - Higher Ed
During a Formula 1 race, a car sends hundreds of millions of data points to its garage for real-time analysis and feedback. So why not use this detailed and rigorous data system elsewhere, like at children's hospitals? Peter van Manen...
Instructional Video29:42
TED Talks

TED: 10 ways the world could end | Stephen Petranek

12th - Higher Ed
How might the human race end? Stephen Petranek lays out 10 terrible options and the science behind them. Will we be wiped out by an asteroid? Eco-collapse? How about a particle collider gone wild?