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RX for Survival - A Global Health Challenge


by Andrew Young, Andrew Young, Gail Willumsen, Gail Willumsen, Mike Beckham, Sarah Holt, Tabitha Jackson, Alexis Bloom, Gina Marsh, Jill Shinefield
Directed by Andrew Young, Gail Willumsen, Mike Beckham, Richard Dale, Sarah Holt
Starring Jacob Gaffney, Julia Joyce, Brad Pitt, Trevor White
Wgbh Boston

List Price: $39.95
Price: $34.99
You Save: $4.96 (12%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 32492
Release Date: February 28, 2006
Rated:  
Running Time: 336 minutes
Theatrical Release: October 20, 2005
Studio: Wgbh Boston


FORMATS

  • Box set
  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • DVD-Video
  • NTSC


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Description
At the dawn of the 21st century, the health of the world is at a critical crossroads. Malaria, tuberculosis, and other diseases virtually eliminated from developed countries routinely claim millions of lives in developing nations. More than 40 new or emergent diseases like Ebola fever, SARS, West Nile virus, and avian flu have appeared within the last 30 years. Strains of "superbugs" resistant to our best drugs mystify modern medicine, while HIV/AIDS still lacks a vaccine and continues to ravage the world.

Yet the problems of global health are not without solutions. During the late 19th and 20th centuries, a "golden era" in medicine spurred the greatest health revolution in human history. Powerful vaccines and antibiotics, clean water and sanitation, proper nutrition and a strong public health infrastructure protected whole populations from infectious disease and increased average life expectancy, especially in developed countries. But the benefits of this revolution have not reached everyone. Infectious diseases that are curable still persist, and deadly new killers are on the rise. In a globalized world, communicable diseases can travel anywhere in a matter of hours.

Why has it taken so long to avert a health crisis that has been preventable for decades? What will it take to get the benefits of medical science and the strategies of disease prevention to all the world’s people? Filmed in over twenty countries and narrated by actor Brad Pitt, Rx for Survival: A Global Health Challenge looks closely at the most critical health threats facing the world today. This six- part documentary series presents the compelling stories and real-life drama of those who are proving that solutions are indeed possible – and that lives can be saved right now, the world over.

Includes: Disease Warriors, Rise of the Superbugs, Delivering the Goods, Deadly Messengers, Back to the Basics, and How Safe Are We?.



CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 5 reviews)

RX for Survival - A Global Health Challenge  
This is an incredible, eye-opening view of worldwide medical issues.
I saw only certain chapters during an RN lecture and immediately purchased it so I could see the entire collection.
December 26, 2007

Good portrayal of current health issues  
Informative although I was a bit skeptical that it was more one sided than it should have been.

It gave a good history of vaccines and antibiotics and was useful in the classroom.
June 27, 2007

An interesting, intelligent exporation of public health issues  
Lots of moving stories and thought provoking information. A well-written and worthwhile documentary set.

This DVD set is a great introduction to the challenges, opportunities and issues of the public health arena. Our highly individualistic culture sometimes blinds us to the concerns facing governments and non-governmental aid agencies. The questions they face are not simply, "how can I personally maintain my own health?" But rather, what can be done to promote the safety, healthy and prosperity of the whole community, of the whole country or the whole region.

In times of war, revolution or other conflict, people have a visible, tangible cause for which to unite. "United we stand, divided we fall" and other such statements are rallying cries in such times. But we may miss the fact that the increased rates of intercourse, commerce and travel in our global economy make disease outbreaks and public health challenges issues for everyone. This series makes clear that pathogenic microbes may pose as serious a threat as war and may face all of us at any time. To this end, united effort and vigilence are the responsibility of all, but also ultimately the defence of all.

Do yourself, and your neighbor, a favor by getting educated with this series.


March 22, 2006

Incredible  
This series was engaging, entertaining, informative and thought provoking. I can't wait to see it again.
January 10, 2006

5 stars +++++++  
By coincidence, I was just talking to a friend about the magazine, Time's profile of extraordinary people taking on the global health crises, when this came on PBS. This was incredible. PBS is known for their award winning documentaries but this exceeded my expectations. Their coverage on epidemics covered older and newer crises from Influenza, Cholera to most recent Ebola, AIDS, and the Avian Flu while also touching on noncommunacable problems such as Vitamin deficiency, polluted drinking water, childhood obesity, and sanitation problems faced in emerging, overpopulated countries.
PBS also included people mentioned in Time magazine such as a the gentleman who recruited mothers and grandmothers to give Vitamin A capsules throughout Nepal, and the man who helped tap natural springs to provide safe drinking water in Africa (forgive me for not knowing their names). I was amazed that just simple ways could help prevent epidemics and how vulnerable we are to having a disease and spreading it.
Some highlights include re-enactments of how past epidemics began, how the source of the outbreak was discovered, and what scientists were influential in the control and prevention of the problem. These re-enactments showed how the flu that killed in the early 1900s were attributed to poor sanitation and living among animals which caused mutation of the virus to humans, and how cholera in late 1800 London could be linked to one drinking pump which had busted and was mixing in with a sewer line.
The documentary is also extraordinary because it touches on topics that you wouldnt think of as epidemics or global crises which includes heart disease and child obesity. I am a cardiac nurse and I know from experience that many people are being admitted for heart attacks in their early 40s and 50s with no family history. The documentary profiles children's obesity and shows how we went from a country (referring to the USA which ranks first in obesity) of underweight children in the 1900s to markedly obese currently. I was astonished by the correlations they drew to the conveniences we have with food, decreased need for childhood labor in the home (farm, etc), and just the lack of reasons to walk. One 12 year old shown had already tripled his risk for heart disease and was prediabetic.
This documentary was very long but throughout I was pealed to the set. I became more aware of the threat that Avian Bird Flu truly has and how there are similarities to the 1900 Influenza epidemic that literally killed people overnight. I also understood the scare when ebola was first reported through the re-enactment of nuns in Zaire screaming that everyone in the community and hospital was dead. I really appreciated the commentaries from people who had been there or scholars and scientists who researched the epidemics.
As you can tell this documentary was so important and it includes everything that you would need to know about global threats of past and present. I have already pre-ordered the set and encourage anyone (especially professers) who is interested in global health to order this too. Also at Time.org, you can read the article profiling the people who have made a difference in Global Health.

December 04, 2005


SIMILAR PRODUCTS

Rx for Survival : Why We Must Rise to the Global Health Challenge
by Philip Hilts

Rx for Survival: The Heroes
Starring Heroes
Wgbh Boston

Rx for Survival: Bird Flu - How Safe Are We?
by Rob Whittlesey, Stephanie Munroe
Directed by Rob Whittlesey
WGBH Boston

Malaria: Fever Wars
PBS (Direct)

NOVA - World in the Balance: The Population Paradox
WGBH Boston

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