Instructional Video10:42
TED Talks

TED: A new superweapon in the fight against cancer | Paula Hammond

12th - Higher Ed
Cancer is a very clever, adaptable disease. To defeat it, says medical researcher and educator Paula Hammond, we need a new and powerful mode of attack. With her colleagues at MIT, Hammond engineered a nanoparticle one-hundredth the size...
Instructional Video19:59
TED Talks

TED: Can we eat to starve cancer? | William Li

12th - Higher Ed
(NOTE: This talk was given in 2010, and this field of science has developed quickly since then. Enjoy it as a piece of science history but not as the last word on this topic. Read "Criticisms & updates" below for more details.) William...
Instructional Video3:56
SciShow

The Man Who Tried to Give Himself An Ulcer... For Science

12th - Higher Ed
In 1984, Dr. Barry Marshall had a theory about ulcers that he couldn't convince the science community of. So, he took matters into his own hands... or stomach, and infected himself with a potentially deadly bacterium.
Instructional Video11:18
SciShow

Why Cancer Labels Are Super Misleading

12th - Higher Ed
What does it actually mean when a label says something ‘causes cancer’? Those labels can be misleading, but knowing the legal and scientific reasoning behind them can help.
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 Video5:24
SciShow

The Rarest Cancer in History (It's Also the Weirdest)

12th - Higher Ed
The medical industry has developed countless methods and tools for diagnosing the myriad of illnesses that can befall us. This, as you might guess, includes cancer. But it took a research team five months to diagnose this specific cancer...
Instructional Video11:17
TED Talks

Jorge Soto: The future of early cancer detection?

12th - Higher Ed
Along with a crew of technologists and scientists, Jorge Soto is developing a simple, noninvasive, open-source test that looks for early signs of multiple forms of cancer. Onstage at TEDGlobal 2014, he demonstrates a working prototype of...
Instructional Video4:37
SciShow

Should You Worry About Alcohol Causing Cancer?

12th - Higher Ed
The American Society of Clinical Oncology recently released an official statement about alcohol and cancer, but the information isn't as extreme as some headlines would imply. Also, scientists at Duke University have found evidence that...
Instructional Video9:07
SciShow

How to Stop Cancer Using RNA

12th - Higher Ed
We know that our immune system watches out for us, but is there a way we could give it a leg up in spotting cancerous tumors?
Instructional Video3:13
SciShow

Elizabeth Blackburn: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings us the story of Elizabeth Blackburn, the Nobel Prize-winning Australian woman who discovered telomeres and telomerase, and helped scientists begin to understand the process of aging at a genetic level.
Instructional Video5:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do cigarettes affect the body? - Krishna Sudhir

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Cigarettes aren't good for us. That's hardly news -- we've known about the dangers of smoking for decades. But how exactly do cigarettes harm us, and can our bodies recover if we stop? Krishna Sudhir details what happens when we smoke --...
Instructional Video10:43
TED Talks

TED: This tiny particle could roam your body to find tumors | Sangeeta Bhatia

12th - Higher Ed
What if we could find cancerous tumors years before they can harm us -- without expensive screening facilities or even steady electricity? Physician, bioengineer and entrepreneur Sangeeta Bhatia leads a multidisciplinary lab that...
Instructional Video13:08
TED Talks

TED: How loss helped one artist find beauty in imperfection | Alyssa Monks

12th - Higher Ed
Painter Alyssa Monks finds beauty and inspiration in the unknown, the unpredictable and even the awful. In a poetic, intimate talk, she describes the interaction of life, paint and canvas through her development as an artist, and as a...
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 Video12:51
TED Talks

TED: Suddenly, my body | Eve Ensler

12th - Higher Ed
Poet, writer, activist Eve Ensler lived in her head. In this powerful talk from TEDWomen, she talks about her lifelong disconnection from her body -- and how two shocking events helped her to connect with the reality, the physicality of...
Instructional Video13:41
TED Talks

TED: How to create a world where no one dies waiting for a transplant | Luhan Yang

12th - Higher Ed
For nearly half a century, scientists have been trying to create a process for transplanting animal organs into humans, a theoretical dream that could help the hundreds of thousands of people in need of a lifesaving transplant. But the...
Instructional Video21:22
TED Talks

My mother's final wish -- and the right to die with dignity | Elaine Fong

12th - Higher Ed
After a terminal cancer diagnosis upended 12 years of remission, all Elaine Fong's mother wanted was a peaceful end of life. What she received instead became a fight for the right to decide when. Fong shares the heart-rending journey to...
Instructional Video6:44
TED Talks

Kevin Stone: The bio-future of joint replacement

12th - Higher Ed
Arthritis and injury grind down millions of joints, but few get the best remedy -- real biological tissue. Kevin Stone shows a treatment that could sidestep the high costs and donor shortfall of human-to-human transplants with a novel...
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

The Woman Who Changed Drug Development

12th - Higher Ed
From a new method of drug design to an antiviral agent for herpes, Gertrude Elion's works totally transformed the world of drug development.
Instructional Video12:13
SciShow

Why Do Bats Carry So Many Dangerous Diseases?

12th - Higher Ed
Bats are amazing and not just because they're the only mammal that can fly! But they also carry a lot of diseases that are dangerous to humans, and while that is definitely not their fault, there is actually a lot we can learn from their...
Instructional Video16:48
TED Talks

TED: The gift and power of emotional courage | Susan David

12th - Higher Ed
Psychologist Susan David shares how the way we deal with our emotions shapes everything that matters: our actions, careers, relationships, health and happiness. In this deeply moving, humorous and potentially life-changing talk, she...
Instructional Video3:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The cancer gene we all have - Michael Windelspecht

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Within every cell in our body, two copies of a tumor suppressor gene called BRCA1 are tasked with regulating the speed at which cells divide. Michael Windelspecht explains how these genes can sometimes mutate, making those cells less...
Instructional Video6:03
TED Talks

TED: Good news in the fight against pancreatic cancer | Laura Indolfi

12th - Higher Ed
Anyone who has lost a loved one to pancreatic cancer knows the devastating speed with which it can affect an otherwise healthy person. TED Fellow and biomedical entrepreneur Laura Indolfi is developing a revolutionary way to treat this...
Instructional Video10:03
SciShow

Here's What DNA Really Looks Like

12th - Higher Ed
There’s more to DNA than just the double helix we know and love: under some conditions this familiar molecule can take on unfamiliar forms, each of which can have a different impact on our health.