S3 Ep11: History of Pandemics: Coronavirus and ‘Disease X’

S3 Ep11: History of Pandemics: Coronavirus an...

Up next

S4 Ep9: Evidence-based strategies for suicide and self-harm prevention with Professor Seena Fazel

Content warning: Please be aware that this episode refers to topics such as suicide, suicidal ideations, methods of suicide and overdose. In Episode 9 of the series, Professor Belinda Lennox sits down with Professor Seena Fazel, Professor of Forensic Psychiatry at the Department ...  Show more

S4 Ep8: Suicide prevention and mental health advocacy with Ben West

Content warning: Please be aware that this episode refers to topics such as suicide, suicidal ideations and depression. In the eighth episode of the series, Professor Belinda Lennox speaks to Ben West, mental health campaigner, best-selling author and social media influencer. In ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Special Episode: On the Origin of Epidemiology
This Podcast Will Kill You

The classic tale of epidemiology almost always begins with public health hero John Snow traipsing all over London to track down the source of the 1854 cholera epidemic, ultimately identified as the Broad Street Pump. While Snow’s famous endeavor earned him the title “the fathe ...

  Show more

History's Lessons for Our Post-Virus Future
Prognosis: Misconception

As soon as the Coronavirus became a pandemic, people began making parallels to the Spanish Flu outbreak of 1918, and reaching even further back to the black death of the middle ages. It makes sense--past pandemics may be our only reference point for whole populations being strick ...  Show more

Coronavirus: Are We Back Where We Started?
Science Vs

We’re six months into this coronavirus pandemic, which has shaken the world and stunned scientists. What have we learned? Where are we headed? To find out, we talk to virologist Professor John Dennehy, virologist and immunologist Professor Ann Sheehy, and hospital epidemiologist ...  Show more

The diseases that changed humanity forever | Dan Kwartler
TED Health

Since humanity’s earliest days, we’ve been plagued by countless disease-causing pathogens. Invisible and persistent, these microorganisms and the illnesses they incur have killed more humans than anything else in history. But which disease has been the deadliest? Dan Kwartler ...

  Show more