anotheranon: (eggman)
[personal profile] anotheranon
I've been watching this miniseries/documentary for the past couple of nights. It's 6 hours of tv (PBS so no commercials) and quite serious, but if it's running on your local PBS station I highly recommend it (I'm sure it will repeat).

Those who know me know that I contract to part of the National Institutes of Health, not in any medical or scientific way, but I do read the stuff that crosses my desk and the people I technically support are doing some Very Cool Things. I genuinely find epidemiology and public health interesting, even if I have only a layperson's understanding of the issues.

One of the best (if morbid) things about the series is that it shows what these terrible diseases look like - polio, smallpox, river blindness, West Nile etc. in Technicolor on screen. The reason I say "best" is because living in the developed world we're fairly isolated from disease and death and because many of the Big Bads have been eradicated here it's easy to develop this idea that they weren't really that bad. A description of smallpox (pustules, fever, dizziness) sounds like nothing worse than a bad case of chicken pox until you see pictures of it. Polio - we think of FDR, who had the best medical care of his time, not a baby in Africa who will never walk.

Maybe that's "anti-vaccines" is a trend - people really don't see or remember just how bad things were :(

Anyway - if it's on in your neck of the woods, see it. All of it isn't morbid, I promise - some of it is quite hopeful, especially BRAC, which teaches poor women how to provide health care for their communities.

Date: 2005-11-05 02:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] semmie17.livejournal.com
Oh... well, I suppose I could have wallowed in the attention *veg* but to tell the truth, I didn't know I had it until it was almost over. I thought I had the flu, combined with a bad allergy attack... and then there was that really itchy mosquito bite. I'm allergic to mosquito bites to begin with, so I shrugged it off. I took some Tylenol for the ache and fever, some Loratadine for the "allergies" and trotted off to work like a good little drone. *shrug*

Date: 2005-11-06 05:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anotheranon.livejournal.com
Yeah, I suppose that makes sense. I guess it still isn't the first thing doctors will test for, if it looks/acts like regular flu.

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