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                  Science Odyssey, A: Matters of Life and Death
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                  Program Overview
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            From the days of house-calls, when x-rays were a daring innovation,
            to the era of high-tech hospitals and specialist physicians,
            "Matters of Life and Death" tracks the passion and determination of
            medical work in the twentieth century. Dramatic experiments, the
            "politics" of science, and races against the clock form a backdrop
            to the discovery of new treatments, antibiotics, and advances in
            surgery and medical technology that have lengthened our lives and
            caused us to rethink our assumptions about life and death.
           
            Hour 1Prologue
 Pan American Exhibition, 1901
 
            IntroductionMedical science in the age of McKinley
 
            Bubonic PlagueHow do we fight disease?
 
            Plague in San Francisco, 1899Public health policy—a product of its timeWar on rats defeats a second epidemicNew understanding of public health 
            PellagraPrevention versus cure
 
            Joseph Goldberger seeks causes of pellagraObservation and experimentationThe link between poverty and disease 
            DiabetesLiving with disease
 
            
              Dire treatments for a fatal diseaseANIMATION: Functions of the pancreas
Frederick Banting and Charles Best's experimentsSetbacks, successes, and squabblesThe price of survival 
            PenicillinA drug that changes history
 
            Alexander Fleming's work in WWIFleming's 1929 discovery of penicillinTurning a discovery into a cureMass production and massive change 
            Hour 2Introduction
 Postwar optimism
 
            Heart SurgeryAnother medical barrier collapses
 
            Daring heart experiments in WWIINew procedures help surgeons beat the clockThe heart-lung machine opens new possibilities 
            Organ TransplantsNew solutions, new dilemmas
 
            Fighting rejection—the road to transplantsDoctors face new doubts and pressuresFirst heart transplant, 1967Success and its side effects 
            CancerGrowing knowledge of an old enemy
 
            Increased lung cancer raises questionsSmoking and other carcinogensTreatments—chemotherapy and childhood leukemiaScientists find cancer-controlling genesSearch for root causes 
            The Role of Modern MedicineWorldwide challenges
 
            Guinea worm parasiteHealth in developing nationsThe aging population 
            ConclusionUsing twentieth-century knowledge
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