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Week
of April 26, 2006
BBC
News
Video:
Gift of Life -- Strangers To Be Allowed to Donate Organs
Gill Higgins
Apr. 26, 2006
"Live organ donation from strangers will be allowed under new human
tissue legislation. Currently,
live donation can only take place between people who are genetically or
emotionally connected."
Video:
Hewitt Heckled by Furious Nurses
Andrew
Burroughs
Apr. 26 2006
"Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt has been heckled for the second
time in three days by health workers. Ms.
Hewitt was jeered and slow hand-clapped by nurses at a conference in Bournemouth."
Image
Gallery: Fighting Hunger in Haiti
"Haiti is one of the poorest countries in the Western hemisphere
-- more than half its inhabitants survive on less than $1 per day. Every
year, an estimated 38,000 children under the age of five die -- almost
one out of three because of malnutrition. The
situation is particularly serious in the remote village of Chauffard,
high in the mountains above the capital, Port-au-Prince."
ABC
News: World News Tonight
Video:
How's Medicare Doing? Seniors Respond
Lisa Stark
Apr. 25, 2006
"Many seniors and their doctors are pleased with the prescription
drug plan."
Video:
U.S. Death Rate Drops
David Muir
Apr. 19, 2006
"A new report finds that Americans are living longer than ever."
The
News Hour with Jim Lehrer
Polio:
An American Story
Susan Dentzer
Apr. 24, 2006
"A conversation with David Oshinsky, this year's Pulitzer Prize winner
in history, about the battle against polio."
Video:
Substance Abuse Increases Among Women
Susan Dentzer
Apr. 21, 2006
"Women are falling victim to substance abuse in increasing numbers
in recent years."
NBC
News: Dateline
Video: Outbreak -- Could It Happen Here?
Ann Curry
Apr. 23, 2006
"Some of the world's top flu experts helped Dateline create
a vision of how our lives could change if the avian flu jumps to humans,
and triggers a pandemic." (Requires Internet Explorer)
CBS
News: 60 Minutes
Video:
Aging In The 21st Century
Steve Croft
Apr. 23, 2006
"Steve Kroft investigates the new multi-billion dollar field of anti-aging
medicine, in which diet, exercise and even controversial drugs play a
role in helping people feel and look younger." (Related story)
Week
of April 19, 2006
The
News Hour with Jim Lehrer
Video
and Audio: Mumps Reappears in Midwest
Ray Suarez
Apr. 20, 2006
"The largest mumps outbreak in more than two decades has hit the
Midwest with confirmed cases in at least eight states. Dr. Julie Gerberding,
director of the Centers for Disease Control, offers an update on efforts
to contain the virus."
World
Health Organization
Video
& Web Photo Series: 'Great Expectations'
Apr. 20, 2006
"In Great
Expectations, six mothers living in different countries of the world
are sharing their experiences of pregnancy, childbirth, and life with
a young baby. The babies are now one year old. This is the final installment
of Great Expectations. The series was launched over 12 months ago
to highlight World Health Day 2005 -- the theme of which was maternal
and child health."
CBS
Evening News
Video:
A Doctor and a Vet Collaborate Against Cancer
Richard Schlesinger
Apr. 18, 2006
"Every month or so, Dr. Ross Wilkins and Dr. Stephen Withrow meet
for breakfast to discuss new treatments for bone cancer. It's a most unusual
partnership, reports CBS News correspondent Richard Schlesinger. The two
doctors are fighting the same kind of disease with the same kind of treatment
-- but they work with very different kinds of patients. Dr. Wilkins is
a bone cancer specialist -- and Dr. Withrow is a veterinary oncologist...The
collaboration of the two doctors has paid off big for both people and
pets. Wilkins has been able to raise the survival rate of his human patients
from 70 to 92 percent. Withrow says his canine patients are living four
times longer." (Related story)
NBC
Nightly News
Video:
Katrina Families Suffer Health Problems
Martin Savidge
April 18, 2006
"A new study finds displaced Hurricane Katrina families suffer chronic
health problems -- especially the children. NBC's Martin Savidge reports."
(Requires Internet Explorer)
BBC
News
Video:
Prime Minister To Press On with NHS Reform
James Hardy
Apr. 18, 2006
"The prime minister has called on health professionals to 'hold their
nerve' as he pushes through NHS reforms. Tony Blair has pledged to cut
waiting lists to a maximum of 18 weeks by 2008. James Hardy reports."
(Related story)
The
New York Times
Audio
and Photo Slideshow: Drought in Africa
Ben Werschkul
Apr. 18, 2006
"Ben Werschkul reports on the drought that has ravished the Horn
of Africa."
ABC
News: World News Tonight
Video:
Struggle Against Pricey Prescription Pills
Apr. 16, 2006
"Why it's getting harder every day to find ways to save on prescription
drugs."
CBS
News: 60 Minutes
Video:
Too Many Men in China
Leslie Stahl
Apr. 16, 2006
"As China's President Hu Jintao makes his first official visit to
the United States this week, his nation faces a demographic time bomb
that could affect its stability. With more than a billion people, China
has too many men. According to the latest census, an average of 120 boys
are born for every 100 girls, the greatest imbalance in the world. As
correspondent Lesley Stahl reports, the root of the problem is a traditional
preference for sons." (Related story)
Here
& Now, National Public Radio
Audio:
Post Polio Syndrome
Apr. 12, 2006
"1979 marked the last U.S. case of polio, but also the first time
polio survivors began to complain of new problems."
Week
of April 12, 2006
PBS
Video:
Rx for Survival -- The Heroes
Apr. 12, 2006
"Using highlights from the acclaimed six-hour Rx for Survival
series, this new special focuses on the individual heroes whose tireless
perseverance saves millions of lives across the globe. From young polio
warriors in India to armies of grandmothers in Nepal, Rx for Survival
-- The Heroes takes viewers inside the stirring campaigns that have
brought renewed faith to poor communities from Africa to South America."
(Related New York Times TV
review)
CNN
Video:
Germs for Good Health
Elizabeth Cohen
Apr. 11, 200
"Some doctors say early exposure to germs may actually be good for
kids' health."
Video:
Battle Against Teen Obesity
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
Apr. 7, 2006
"Some teens are turning to a controversial surgery to help battle
obesity."
CBS
News: The Early Show
Video:
Painkiller Killing Kids
Tracy Smith
Apr. 10, 2006
"A painkiller rarely mentioned in drug warnings for kids is now the
No. 1 drug that kills young people in several states. Tracy Smith's report
on methadone reveals how kids are abusing it and dying."
ABC
News
Video:
HRT and Breast Cancer
Dr. Tim Johnson
Apr. 11, 2006
"Studies show that use of estrogen does not increase the risk for
breast cancer."
Business
Week
Slideshow:
Taking the Pulse of Medical Training
Reena Jana
Apr. 10, 2006
"Although it looks a lot like a video game, Pulse!! is a serious
training tool for nurses and physicians. It's a $7.5 million project that
immerses students in the hectic environment of a hospital's intensive
care unit and places them in a first-person role as a health-care professional."
(Related story)
The
New York Times
Video:
A Disease's Hidden Agony
Donald G. McNeil Jr.
Apr. 9, 2006
"Times reporter Donald G. McNeil Jr. discusses the eradication
efforts for lymphatic filariasis." (Related story)
The
Boston Globe
Audio
Slideshow: A Personal Lifeline to Somalia
Chris Janiec
Apr. 9,
2006
"Nuuh
Hassan strolled into Butterfly Coffee in Roxbury Crossing after a recent
week on the job as a sheet-metal worker. Passing tables full of customers,
he headed to the back of the cafe where a glassed-in counter houses a
money transfer service. There, in a matter of minutes, he sent a lifeline
to his family in Somalia -- $150. Six thousand miles to the east, in a
coastal town south of the Somali capital, Nuuh's father, Hersi Hassan,
received the cash in dollars at a rundown money transfer shop. 'It means
survival,' said Hersi Hassan, standing in the sandy courtyard of his home
in Merca. He said it means that he, Nuuh's stepmother, and his nine siblings
could eat that month."
Free registration required.
National
Public Radio
Audio:
Romney's Mission -- Massachusetts Health Care
Richard Knox
Apr. 8, 2006
"This week, Massachusetts enacted legislation to provide health insurance
for virtually every citizen within the next three years. Gov. Mitt Romney
says he'll sign it into law. The measure would be the first in the nation
to require people to buy health insurance if they don't get it at work."
Audio:
When Physicians Get Cancer
Joanne
Silberner
Apr. 6, 2006
"Dealing with a potentially fatal cancer is difficult for anyone,
but doctors with cancer face a special challenge. They're accustomed to
giving medical care, not receiving it. And they know better than most
what their future might look like."
Week
of April 5, 2006
ABC
News: World News Tonight
Video:
One Year Later, Peter Jennings Still Educates Public on Smoking
Apr. 5, 2006
"Peter Jennings's announcement a year ago that he had lung cancer
helped change people's attitudes about smoking, according to public health
advocates...Thomas J. Glynn of the American Cancer Society called the
public declaration a 'watershed event in public health.'" (Related
story)
BBC
News
Video:
Folic Acid 'Should Be Added to Bread'
Ben Ando
Apr. 5, 2006
"Folic acid should be added to flour and bread to reduce the number
of birth defects, the food watchdog has said. Folates are already added
to food in the United States and Canada." (Related story)
Video:
Bird Flu in the U.K.
Tom Heap
Apr. 5, 2006
"Pets, farmers, and government officials are set to take part in
an exercise to simulate an outbreak of bird flu. Exercise Hawthorn is
designed to analyse how people would react if bird flu was found in the
U.K." (Related story)
National
Public Radio
Audio:
Massachusetts May Require Health Insurance for All
Richard Knox
Apr. 5, 2006
"The Massachusetts legislature has enacted a bill designed to provide
health insurance for nearly all its citizens. If Gov. Mitt Romney signs
the bill, the state would become the first in the nation to require all
individuals to have health coverage or pay a penalty."
Audio:
Seeking Avian Flu in Alaska
Elizabeth Arnold
Apr. 5, 2006
"The U.S. government has set an ambitious goal of testing 100,000
birds for [nfluenza A, or H5N1], mainly in Alaska, where wildlife biologists,
researchers and public-health officials are hurriedly preparing for the
first flocks to land."
CNN
Video:
Secrets of Self-Mutilation
Adaora Udoji
Apr. 4, 2006
"CNN's Adaora Udoji reports on a program that helps people whose
depression leads to self-mutilation."
Video:
Teen Drug Use Declining
Gary Nurenberg
Apr. 3, 2006
"CNN's Gary Nurenberg reports recent numbers show teen drug use is
actually on the decline."
NBC
Nightly News
Video:
Vitamin D May Lower Cancer Risk
Robert Bazell
Apr. 4, 2006
"New studies suggest women who get lots of vitamin D are less likely
to develop breast cancer, NBC's Robert Bazell reports." (Requires
Internet Explorer)
Video:
Kids and Car Seats a Weighty Issue
Janet Shamlian
Apr. 3, 2006
"A study in the Journal of Pediatrics found thousands of kids
are too big for their car seats." (Requires Internet Explorer)
The
News Hour with Jim Lehrer
Video:
The World Food Program
Jeffrey Brown
Mar. 29, 2006
"The head of the World Food Program talks about how donations are
solicited and distributed."
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