News Clip1:32
AFP News Agency

CLEAN : Head of UN Atomic Energy Agency says 'no risk' for Zaporizhzhia plant after director expulsed

9th - Higher Ed
The director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Raphael Grossi says there is no risk for Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant after the recent expulsion of the site's director Ihor Murashov by Russia (Footage by AFPTV via...
News Clip5:30
Curated Video

Students at technology institute come up with innovative designs

Higher Ed
1. Wide of traffic; mirage formed due to heat 2. People with handkerchiefs covering their heads 3. Various of people with umbrellas and caps 4. Exterior of Indian Institute of Technology's textile engineering department 5. People...
News Clip2:36
Sky News

Pioneering stem cell treatment for lung cancer to be trialled in the UK

Higher Ed
Pioneering stem cell treatment for lung cancer to be trialled in the UK
News Clip2:09
Teen Kids News

Can Knitting Be Your Solution To Anxiety And Better Health

6th - 8th
Emily reports on a new hobby amongst teens- knitting. Knitting requires different kinds of yarn and needles. It takes patience and concentration and it can be difficult to learn to knit at first. However, once you get the hang of it,...
News Clip5:27
Curated Video

Cancer conference discuss treatments

Higher Ed
Barcelona, September 24, 2007 1. Various shots of Laurent Cohen walking steps down 2. Various shots of Laurent Cohen at his desk 3. SOUNDBITE: (French) Laurent Cohen, Cancer Survivor "I never had doubts that I was going to win this...
News Clip2:17
Curated Video

Online Cancer Reporting Tool May Save Lives

Higher Ed
JAMES SYLVESTER HAS COLON CANCER, BUT HIS CHANCES OF A LONGER SURVIVAL AND A BETTER QUALITY OF LIFE ARE BEING ENHANCED THANKS TO AN APP.SYLVESTER USES HIS PHONE TO REPORT ANY SIDE EFFECTS OF TREATMENT HE EXPERIENCES IN BETWEEN DOCTOR...
News Clip5:36
Bloomberg

Andy's New Face: How 3-D Tech Is Transforming Surgery

Higher Ed
Jul.07 -- Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, in the U.K., is a world leader in facial reconstruction technology. Combining 3-D printing and computer modeling, doctors and technicians have reduced surgery times and improved...
News Clip2:16
Curated Video

USA: SCIENTISTS HOPEFUL OF NEW CANCER TREATMENT

Higher Ed
English/Nat Scientists in the U-S are hopeful they have discovered a treatment which - if proven successful in human trials - could kill cancer cells without harming healthy cells around them. A scientific team at the University of...
News Clip1:36
Curated Video

Associated Press reporter Marilynn Marchione talks about what Steve Jobs had been suffering from and how he dealt with the disease.

Higher Ed
HEADLINE First Person: Jobs battled cancer quietly CAPTION: AP Chief Medical Writer Marilynn Marchione talks about what Steve Jobs had been suffering from and how he dealt with the disease. (Oct. 6) Steve Jobs never said very much...
News Clip2:25
Sky News

'Thousands' Denied Life-Extending Cancer Tests

Higher Ed
VOICED:Thousands of cancer patients in England are missing out on targeted treatments which could improve survival rates. Cancer Research UK is warning this morning that a lack of funding and awareness means doctors are failing to carry...
News Clip3:42
Curated Video

Two winners of Nobel Prize in Medicine developed therapies for treating cancer

Higher Ed
The Nobel Prize in medicine was jointly awarded Monday to two researchers from the United States and Japan for advances in discovering how the body's immune system can fight off the scourge of cancer.
News Clip5:42
Curated Video

Nanoknife treatment for cancer patients

Higher Ed
An experimental procedure is being used on cancer patients who have exhausted all conventional forms of treatment. The Nanoknife uses electricity to help destroy cancer in soft tissue, without harming other organs. The procedure is...
News Clip2:30
Curated Video

A year after a New York couple donated their 15-year-old son's organs, they learned the teen actually had a rare form of cancer and two of the four transplant recipients have died.

Higher Ed
Teen organ donor's gift turns tragic A year after a New York couple donated their 15-year-old son's organs, they learned the teen actually had a rare form of cancer and two of the four transplant recipients have died. (April...
News Clip1:44
Sky News

Breakthrough for thoase at risk of Breast Cancer

Higher Ed
Breakthrough for thoase at risk of Breast Cancer
News Clip1:26
Curated Video

U.S. breast cancer rates plunged an unprecedented 7 percent in 2003, the year after millions of women stopped taking menopause hormones when a study showed the pills raise the risk of tumors.

Higher Ed
HEADLINE: Breast Cancer Rate Plunged 7 Pct. in '03 (breast-cancer) CAPTION: U.S. breast cancer rates plunged an unprecedented 7 percent in 2003, the year after millions of women stopped taking menopause hormones when a study showed the...
News Clip2:43
Bloomberg

The U.S. Is Approaching a Mental Health Crisis, Says Allergan CEO

Higher Ed
Nov.12 -- Brent Saunders, Allergan Chairman and CEO, discusses his mission to end mental health stigma with Caroline Hyde on 'Bloomberg Markets: The Close.'
News Clip2:20
Curated Video

USA - Advancements for breast cancer testing

Higher Ed
A new, non-invasive test to discriminate benign lesions from breast cancer should be commercially available in Europe by the end of 1998. The test, developed by Biofield Corp. of Atlanta, Georgia, is similar to an electrocardiogram and...
News Clip2:42
Curated Video

Online risk assessment of major diseases

Higher Ed
1. MS web user Rachael Meyer using the web site 2. Side view of Rachel looking at computer screen 3. CU clicking boxes on screen 4. CU screen shot scrolling down questionnaire 5. Dr. Graham Colditz at his desk 6. Reverse shot of Dr...
News Clip7:34
Bloomberg

China's Gracell Biotechnologies Lists on Nasdaq

Higher Ed
Jan.10 -- William Cao, founder and chief executive officer of Gracell Biotechnologies, discusses the Shanghai-based company's initial public offering in the U.S. and its growth strategy. Gracell is developing treatments for various...
News Clip1:25
Curated Video

Study Found Cancer Caused Higher Share Of Deaths In Some Countries

Higher Ed
In higher-income countries, one study found cancer caused more deaths for middle-aged people than heart disease.
News Clip2:38
Sky News

Scientists warn that cooking with vegetable oils may be more harmful than cooking with other more traditional fats

Higher Ed
VOICED: Shows Interior shots roast meal being cooked, served and eaten in carvery restaurant, voxpops with customers, interviews with chef and doctor and graphics explainer of levels of toxic chemicals. Next time you heat up some oil to...
News Clip0:55
Curated Video

Ruth Bader Ginsburg Recovering In Hospital After Infection Treatment

Higher Ed
The court said doctors found a "gallstone that had migrated to her cystic duct, blocking it and causing an infection."
News Clip5:00
Curated Video

Attempts to expand palliative care programmes for children

Higher Ed
AP Television New Delhi, India, August 17, 2012 1. Wide of Somesh Kumar being carried to the bed at a newly launched palliative care unit run by charity group Cankids 2. Various of the doctor examining Kumar with his stethoscope 3....