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Week
of September 27, 2006
The
New York Times
Video:
Part 1 -- Water Woes in India
Somini Sengupta
Sept. 29, 2006
"Indians are lacking basic services like water and sewage disposal.
The Times's Somini Sengupta tours the noxious Yamuna river and
the slums lining its banks." (Part 1; Running time: 3:06)
Video:
Part 2 -- Water Woes in India
Somini Sengupta
Sept. 29, 2006
"Indians are lacking basic services like water and sewage disposal.
The Times's Somini Sengupta tours the noxious Yamuna river and
the slums lining its banks." (Part 2; Running time: 4:21)
BBC
News
Video:
China Trades Prisoners' Organs
Rupert
Wingfield Hayes
Sept. 27, 2006
"China has become a world centre for organ transplants, but many
of the organs come from executed prisoners. The BBC's Rupert Wingfield
Hayes went undercover in China to investigate the dark side of the industry."
(Related story)
(Running time: 4:01)
Video:
Italian Man Asks for Right To Die
Dominic Hughes
Sept. 27, 2006
"A severely ill Italian man, Piergiorgio Welby, has made a plea to
his country's president to be allowed to die. Assisting a death in Italy
is a crime that carries a jail sentence." (Running time: 2:03)
National
Public Radio
Audio:
French Prepare To Face Tighter Anti-Smoking Laws
Eleanor Beardsley
Sept. 27, 2006
"In France, where smoking is ubiquitous, an existing ban covering
office buildings, public transportation and schools is only loosely enforced.
But next month, an official commission is expected to recommend tightening
the law."
(Running time: 3:41)
Audio:
Vaccine May Eliminate E. Coli in Cattle
Sarah
McCammon
Sept. 26, 2006
"It's not yet clear how E. coli 0157 H7 contaminated spinach during
the recent nationwide outbreak. One likely source of the E. coli bacterial
strain is cattle waste, which could have tainted irrigation water used
to grow the spinach. Cattle
can tolerate the bacteria with no problems, but E. coli can cause severe
illness and even death in humans. At a University of Nebraska research
feedlot near Lincoln, researchers are now working on an E. coli vaccine
that would be given to cattle instead of humans." (Running time:
4:12)
CBS's
The Early Show
Video:
Clean Hands, Good Health
Dr. Emily Senay
Sept. 22, 2006
"A new survey sponsored by the soap and detergent industry says a
lot of people have forgotten the basics of washing hands. Dr. Emily Senay
gives a refresher course." (Related story)
(Running time: 3:08)
Week
of September 20, 2006
Clinton
Global Initiative Meeting
Video:
Webcasts from the Clinton Global Initiative Annual Meeting, Sept. 20-22
Via the Kaiser Family Foundation
"As the official webcaster of the 2006 Clinton Global Initiative
Annual Meeting, September 20-22, kaisernetwork.org will provide live and
archived coverage as well as transcripts and podcasts of events."
BBC
News
Photo
Slideshow: Zimbabwe's AIDS Orphans
James Elder
Sept. 20, 2006
"James Elder, working for the childrens charity UNICEF in Zimbabwe,
describes how AIDS is affecting family life in the southern African country.
Zimbabwes
is the world's fastest-shrinking economy outside a war zone -- unemployment
has reached more than 70% and inflation recently topped 1,200%."
Video:
Living with Manic Depression
Sept. 19, 2006
"Manic depression affects around one in 100 people in the UK but
it is a condition rarely spoken about openly." (Running time:
7:09)
CNN
Video:
Deadly Medical Mixups
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
Sept. 20, 2006
"CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta reports medication errors at hospitals are
not all that uncommon." (Running time: 3:02)
Video:
E. Coli Command Center
Dr. Sanjay
Gupta
Sept. 20, 2006
"The CDC continues looking for the source of E. coli contamination
of spinach. CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta reports." (Running time: 2:02)
CBS
Evening News
Video:
Still No Anthrax Answers
Jim Stewart
Sept. 19, 2006
"Five years after the start of a series of anthrax attacks, the FBI
says it's no closer to solving a mystery that left five people dead. Jim
Stewart has more." (Related story)
(Running time: 2:10)
ABC
News: World News with Charles Gibson
Video:
Heartburn's Hidden Dangers
Dr. Tim
Johnson
Sept. 18, 2006
"What may seem like a minor annoyance could be a major link to cancer."
(Related story)
(Running time: 2:45)
Week
of September 13, 2006
ABC
World News with Charles Gibson
Video:
A Big Boost in the Fight Against Poverty
Martin
Seemungal
Sept. 13, 2006
"The fight against poverty got a big boost [Wednesday]. George Soros,
the billionaire philanthropist, has pledged $50 million to the United
Nations' Millennium Villages project in Africa...Jeffrey Sachs, the American
economist who is convinced that poverty can be beaten in our lifetime,
is in charge of the project. He said the Soros pledge is important because
it will act as an example to others." (Related story)
Video:
Sudan -- Nation in Crisis
David
Wright
Sept. 12, 2006
"David Wright introduces us to the Janjaweed, the government-backed
group responsible for some of the worst atrocities in the Darfur region
of the Sudan." (Running time: 2:06)
The
New York Times
Audio
and Photos: India & Obesity -- A Rising Challenge
N.R. Kleinfield
Sept. 13, 2006
"N.R. Kleinfield narrates a look at the sweet shops and 'sugar
hospitals' of urban India."
Audio
and Photos: Darfur's Agony
Lydia Polgreen
Sept. 9, 2006
"Lydia Polgreen reports from a refugee camp in Darfur filled with
death, disease and fear."
PBS:
P.O.V.
Multimedia:
The Boys of Baraka
Heidi
Ewing and Rachel Grady
Sept. 12, 2006
"African-American boys have a very high chance of being incarcerated
or killed before they reach adulthood. In Baltimore, one of the country's
most poverty-stricken cities for inner-city residents, the Baraka School
project was founded to break the cycle of violence through an innovative
education program that literally removed young boys from low-performing
public schools and unstable home environments." (Related New York
Times TV
review)
BBC
News Online
Video:
U.N. AIDS Chief in China Visit
Rupert Wingfield-Hayes
Sept. 12, 2006
"The head of the United Nation's AIDS programme, Peter Piot, has
visited China to see how the nation is dealing with the virus. BBC reporter
Rupert Wingfield-Hayes joined Mr. Piot as he met Chinese youths battling
against drug addiction and HIV/AIDS." (Running time: :57)
National
Public Radio
Audio:
Study Details Benefits, Limits of Green Tea
Patricia
Neighmond
Sept. 12, 2006
"A new study finds that green tea significantly reduces the risk
of death from many causes, including heart disease. The study did not
find, however, that green tea has any effect on cancer, as has been previously
claimed."
(Running time:
3:45)
Audio:
Science Breakthroughs Revisited -- A Cancer Killer
Joe Palca
Sept. 12, 2006
"Cancer researcher Ira Pastan tried combining a toxin that kills
cells with a type of antibody that targets certain cells. The idea was
to create a 'cocktail' that would seek out cancer cells -- and only cancer
cells -- and kill them with the toxin. It's been 10 years since Pastan
first tried this method. Did it work? Well, yes and no..." (Running
time: 4:25)
CNN
Video:
Trading Addictions?
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
Sept. 12, 2006
"CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta explains that weight loss surgery may come
with an unwanted side effect." (Running time: 2:33)
CBS
News: 60 Minutes
Video:
The Dust at Ground Zero
Katie
Couric
Sept. 10, 2006
"On Sept. 11 and for months after, thousands of rescue workers searched
through the debris for survivors and victims, breathing in toxic air in
the process. Katie Couric reports on the health problems many of these
rescue workers face." (Video requires Real Player; related story)
(Running time: 3:15)
Week
of September 6, 2006
BBC
News
Video:
NHS To Curb 'Dated' Treatments
Jane Hughes
Sept. 6, 2006
"NHS doctors are being told to save money by weeding out some commonly
used treatments deemed ineffective and obsolete. The National Institute
for Health and Clinical Excellence initiative has been given government
backing." (Related story)
(Running time: 2:15)
PBS
Wide Angle
Video:
Back to School
Sept. 5, 2006
"In 2003 Wide Angle profiled seven children in seven countries
-- Afghanistan, Benin, Brazil, India, Japan, Kenya, and Romania -- as
they started their first year of school. Returning in 2006, we find that
some of these children are already struggling, hanging onto their education
by a thread. With over 100 million children around the globe out of school,
this 90-minute special puts a human face on an issue with profound consequences
for global development." (Episode's website)
(Running time: 79 mins)
CNN
Video:
Doctors Around the Clock
Dr. Sanjay Gupta
Sept. 5, 2006
"CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta reports on a grueling tradition of training
interns to become doctors." (Running time: 2:40)
The
New York Times
Video:
The Milk Gap
Jodi Kantor
Sept. 5, 2006
"For lower-income mothers, breast-feeding, and the pumping it requires,
is close to impossible at work." (Related story;
Free registration required.)
(Running time: 5:31)
CBS
Evening News
Video:
World Trade Center Illness
Russ Mitchell
Sept. 5, 2006
The New York City Health Department issued guidelines to physicians for
detecting World Trade Center-related illnesses. 40,000 people are estimated
to have been exposed to hazardous materials. (Video
requires Real Player; related story)
(Running time:
3:33)
National
Public Radio
Audio:
The Latest Buzz on the Mosquito War
Steve Inskeep
Sept. 4, 2006
"It's a war that began more than a century ago, but there's no end
in sight. It costs hundreds of millions of dollars each year. And hundreds
of scientists have devoted their lives to it. It's the battle against
disease-carrying mosquitoes." (Running time: 7:20)
Dateline
NBC
Video:
The Orphans of Iraq
Richard Engel
Sept. 1, 2006
They are afraid and alone, witnesses to more violence and death than most
adults see in a lifetime. Richard Engel tells us the heartbreaking experience
of meeting orphaned Iraqi children. Will anyone save them? (Video requires
Internet Explorer; related story)
(Running time: 4:35)
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