6 Diseases That Have Shaped Human History

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[Music] <font color="#E5E5E5">infectious diseases have had some pretty</font> major impacts on<font color="#CCCCCC"> human history and</font> that's putting<font color="#E5E5E5"> it mildly</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> take the black</font> death of the Middle Ages which wiped out more<font color="#E5E5E5"> than a third of the</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> population</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> of</font> Europe<font color="#CCCCCC"> or smallpox</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> which hitched a ride</font> to the Americas on ships and decimated native peoples we've been haunted<font color="#CCCCCC"> by</font> microbial enemies but sometimes<font color="#E5E5E5"> our</font> drive to<font color="#E5E5E5"> understand them has laid the</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">foundations of modern science</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> so here</font> are six<font color="#CCCCCC"> of history's most devastating</font> diseases<font color="#E5E5E5"> and how they affected us in</font> some pretty<font color="#E5E5E5"> big ways we'll start our</font> list with plague caused<font color="#CCCCCC"> by the bacteria</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">your</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> sania pestis</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> it's transmitted to</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">people when they're bitten by fleas</font> carried by rodents<font color="#CCCCCC"> most famous for the</font> 14th century outbreak called the Black <font color="#E5E5E5">Death plague bacteria</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> actually caused</font> three different forms of the disease <font color="#CCCCCC">you've probably heard of the most common</font> one bubonic plague<font color="#CCCCCC"> it's when these</font> bacteria target the lymphatic<font color="#CCCCCC"> system</font> which helps<font color="#E5E5E5"> protect your body from junk</font> like toxins between two and six days later infected victims get a high fever headaches and vomiting<font color="#CCCCCC"> plus they get</font> swollen<font color="#E5E5E5"> lymph nodes called buboes which</font> give the plague its name<font color="#E5E5E5"> bubonic plague</font> causes plenty of damage<font color="#E5E5E5"> on its own but</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">if it's left untreated it can develop</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">into another form though these kinds can</font> also occur on their own<font color="#CCCCCC"> if the bacteria</font> infect the bloodstream it's called septicemia plague they can cause clots that keep blood from<font color="#E5E5E5"> reaching tissues</font> which turn black as they die or if the microbes infect the lungs it's called pneumonic plague<font color="#CCCCCC"> this</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> can lead to bloody</font> coughs and rapid death and lets<font color="#E5E5E5"> people</font> transmit the plague through tiny droplets in the<font color="#E5E5E5"> air</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> today</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> all forms of</font> plague can<font color="#CCCCCC"> be treated using antibiotics</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">but they used to kill half or more of</font> infected patients<font color="#CCCCCC"> which had some huge</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">effects on society</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> the</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> first confirmed</font> plague epidemic was called the Justinian <font color="#CCCCCC">plague it swept through the Roman</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> Empire</font> starting in 541<font color="#E5E5E5"> C</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> II and contributed to</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">its fall in the Roman capital of</font> Constantinople it's<font color="#CCCCCC"> estimated</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> that upwards of</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> 5,000</font> people<font color="#CCCCCC"> per day</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> were killed at its peak</font> the<font color="#E5E5E5"> second big wave reached Europe in</font> 1347 when merchant ships arrived in Italy full of<font color="#E5E5E5"> six sailors the</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> black</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">death swept through the continent in</font> just a few<font color="#CCCCCC"> years and</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> during that time</font> it's estimated that<font color="#E5E5E5"> a quarter to half of</font> all Europeans died some<font color="#E5E5E5"> 25 million</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">people</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> over</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> the next</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> couple centuries</font> plague kept cropping up and the<font color="#E5E5E5"> first</font> quarantines were implemented at<font color="#CCCCCC"> the time</font> it was<font color="#CCCCCC"> thought that infectious diseases</font> were transmitted by bad air<font color="#E5E5E5"> so officials</font> tried to isolate sick people<font color="#E5E5E5"> and</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> those</font> trav from places<font color="#CCCCCC"> that</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> had an outbreak</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> to</font> prevent more deaths<font color="#E5E5E5"> and even though the</font> science was wrong quarantines helped prevent<font color="#E5E5E5"> the spread of pneumonic plague</font> between people and control the rats with fleas<font color="#CCCCCC"> that carried plague bacteria the</font> last huge wave of<font color="#E5E5E5"> outbreaks began in</font> 1894 in<font color="#E5E5E5"> rural China</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> sweeping through</font> Asia and Australia<font color="#E5E5E5"> and finally after a</font> few<font color="#CCCCCC"> decades scientists discovered the</font> bacteria<font color="#E5E5E5"> and carriers behind it all</font> which let us<font color="#E5E5E5"> start squashing out this</font> disease<font color="#CCCCCC"> smallpox was also a major cause</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">of death in the</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> past and killed nearly</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">30 percent</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> of all people who had it it's</font> a disease caused by the variola virus which starts with<font color="#E5E5E5"> high fever and</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">headache</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> then small bumps full of</font> infectious fluid appear all over<font color="#E5E5E5"> those</font> are the pox<font color="#CCCCCC"> and in survivors they</font> eventually scab and<font color="#E5E5E5"> turn into scars</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">humans infected each other through tiny</font> droplets coughed or sneezed through the air<font color="#E5E5E5"> but in a super gross twist the pox</font> fluids and crusty scabs got all<font color="#E5E5E5"> over</font> clothes and blankets<font color="#CCCCCC"> and could infect</font> new hosts<font color="#CCCCCC"> too now smallpox was</font> devastating<font color="#CCCCCC"> for lots of human history</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">but it hit especially hard when</font> colonists from<font color="#E5E5E5"> Europe invaded the</font> Americas<font color="#CCCCCC"> the native populations had</font> immune systems that were adapted to fight off<font color="#E5E5E5"> local diseases not foreign</font> ones so the variola virus infected and killed huge numbers of<font color="#E5E5E5"> them</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> overall</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">diseases like smallpox may have caused</font> the death of up to<font color="#CCCCCC"> 90% of</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> the Native</font> American population<font color="#CCCCCC"> smallpox likely</font> helped the Spanish conquer the Aztec empire<font color="#CCCCCC"> too though it's not</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> nearly on the</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">same scale the European colonists were</font> also hurt by the disease<font color="#CCCCCC"> like some</font> estimates think that George Washington lost more troops<font color="#E5E5E5"> to the smallpox</font> epidemic of 1775 to 1783 the Revolutionary War<font color="#E5E5E5"> casualty rates got a</font> little better<font color="#E5E5E5"> after an army wide</font> variolation<font color="#E5E5E5"> or intentionally infecting</font> people with<font color="#CCCCCC"> a bit of</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> gunk from a</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> patient</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">scabs to</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> hopefully help</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> them build</font> immunity<font color="#E5E5E5"> exposing people to the virus in</font> a controlled way<font color="#E5E5E5"> ended up being safer</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">than normal but they still suffer from</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">some symptoms and there was a risk of</font> death later doctors tried to<font color="#E5E5E5"> make it</font> less dangerous<font color="#CCCCCC"> by using</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> people</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> or</font> animals infected with cow pox a less harmful cousin of<font color="#CCCCCC"> smallpox caused by the</font> vaccinia virus<font color="#CCCCCC"> this process was called</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">vaccination and led to the</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> eradication</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">of smallpox and to all the vaccines we</font> rely on<font color="#E5E5E5"> today speaking of diseases that</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">crossed oceans</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> let's talk about syphilis</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">scientists think this sexually</font> transmitted bacterial infection may have made its way<font color="#CCCCCC"> to</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> Europe in colonists</font> returning from<font color="#E5E5E5"> the Americas it's caused</font> by<font color="#CCCCCC"> Treponema pallidum bacteria and the</font> initial symptom aren't fun<font color="#CCCCCC"> rashes sores fever headaches</font> and muscle pain<font color="#CCCCCC"> it's transmitted by</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">direct contact with the sores or passed</font> down from<font color="#E5E5E5"> an infected</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> mother to</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> her</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">child</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> after a few weeks or months though</font> the rashes and sores disappear and<font color="#E5E5E5"> the</font> disease goes into a latent stage where it can be detected<font color="#E5E5E5"> in a blood test</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> but</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">it doesn't cause any</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> symptoms</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> and in up</font> to a third of<font color="#E5E5E5"> untreated cases the</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">disease comes roaring back to cause</font> dementia<font color="#E5E5E5"> dysfunction of multiple organs</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">lots of pain and death the first</font> recorded outbreak of syphilis began in 1495 after a victory<font color="#E5E5E5"> celebration by the</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">French army with infected sex workers so</font> the people<font color="#E5E5E5"> of the time started to call</font> it the French disease<font color="#CCCCCC"> and it was pretty</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">deadly possibly because the disease was</font> new to Europe and<font color="#E5E5E5"> people didn't have</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> any</font> immune resistance to it it's hard<font color="#E5E5E5"> to say</font> how many people syphilis killed<font color="#E5E5E5"> because</font> we didn't have<font color="#E5E5E5"> any medical records</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> that</font> tracked cause of death not to mention sexually transmitted infections were considered shameful<font color="#E5E5E5"> so many people tried</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">to hide them or pass them off as</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> other</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">things like</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> leprosy what we do know is</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">that the disease ravaged the world until</font> one<font color="#CCCCCC"> of the first antibiotics ever</font> developed<font color="#E5E5E5"> to put an end</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> to it around</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> the</font> turn of<font color="#CCCCCC"> the 20th century the</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">immunologist</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> dr. Paul Ehrlich had</font> discovered<font color="#CCCCCC"> that</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> certain dyes only bonded</font> to specific types of cells<font color="#E5E5E5"> in his lab</font> his finding led him to believe that certain compounds could target disease-causing agents like bacteria without<font color="#E5E5E5"> attacking healthy tissues</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> a</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">treatment</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> that</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> would later be</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> called</font> chemotherapy<font color="#E5E5E5"> using a systematic</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">screening process Ehrlich found a</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">chemical that he developed into an anti</font> syphilitic drug called<font color="#E5E5E5"> Solverson it</font> quickly became the<font color="#E5E5E5"> most prescribed drug</font> in the world<font color="#CCCCCC"> and the process that led to</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">its discovery earned Ehrlich the Nobel</font> Prize<font color="#CCCCCC"> in Physiology or medicine in 1908</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">caused</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> by a bacterium</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> called</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> Vibrio</font> cholerae<font color="#E5E5E5"> cholera is a severe</font> gastrointestinal disease that causes <font color="#E5E5E5">vomiting and diarrhea</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">as soon as 12</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> hours after infection</font> these bacteria<font color="#E5E5E5"> produce toxins that bind</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">to small intestine enzymes that control</font> water secretion<font color="#CCCCCC"> from the rest of the</font> body<font color="#E5E5E5"> specifically the toxin makes these</font> enzymes flood the intestines with water <font color="#E5E5E5">and that leads to</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> dehydration so severe</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">that it's deadly there were reports of</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">similar sounding diseases in India as</font> early as 1000 CE II but cholera didn't become a global<font color="#CCCCCC"> problem until</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> the 19th</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">century</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> when widespread trade started</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">happening</font> cholera caused a lot of<font color="#E5E5E5"> fear wherever it</font> went<font color="#CCCCCC"> and even</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> today it's a public health</font> problem<font color="#CCCCCC"> with estimated millions of cases</font> a year<font color="#CCCCCC"> and a hundred thousand deaths</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">nowadays we know</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> that cholera is spread</font> through drinking<font color="#E5E5E5"> water that's been</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">contaminated by</font> infected poop particles<font color="#E5E5E5"> so when it hit</font> England in the 1830s<font color="#E5E5E5"> medicine was ruled</font> by the idea<font color="#CCCCCC"> that disease</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> whether it's</font> black plague or cholera<font color="#CCCCCC"> was caused by</font> bad air from corpses impure people or <font color="#E5E5E5">even from swamps so in 1854 when a</font> doctor named John<font color="#E5E5E5"> Snow</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> traced almost</font> every victim of a cholera<font color="#E5E5E5"> outbreak in</font> London to a single water pump<font color="#CCCCCC"> nobody</font> really believed him<font color="#E5E5E5"> town</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> officials</font> removed the pumps handle which kept <font color="#CCCCCC">people from drinking that</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> water to</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">humour</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> him and new cases</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> of</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> cholera</font> dropped off<font color="#CCCCCC"> sharply but people still</font> didn't buy his ideas until<font color="#E5E5E5"> a local</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">Minister set out to prove him wrong and</font> that failed spectacularly<font color="#CCCCCC"> his report</font> actually ended up tracing the outbreak <font color="#CCCCCC">to a dirty diaper from</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> a baby who'd</font> contracted cholera<font color="#E5E5E5"> outside of London</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> dr.</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">snow's revolutionary methods to track</font> infection patterns and<font color="#E5E5E5"> find the source</font> of<font color="#E5E5E5"> an outbreak is why he's considered</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">one of the fathers</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> of modern</font> epidemiology<font color="#CCCCCC"> so it turns out this John</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">Snow might have known something after</font> all<font color="#E5E5E5"> mosquitoes</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> are a well-known</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> pest</font> when<font color="#E5E5E5"> it comes to</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> spreading disease and</font> yellow fever is no exception<font color="#CCCCCC"> it's a</font> viral infection<font color="#CCCCCC"> and most people infected</font> with flavivirus<font color="#CCCCCC"> experience symptoms</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> like</font> fever chills aches fatigue<font color="#E5E5E5"> and vomiting</font> an unlucky<font color="#CCCCCC"> 15% or so of patients have it</font> much<font color="#E5E5E5"> worse</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> with bleeding jaundice and</font> multi organ failure which can<font color="#E5E5E5"> lead</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> to</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">death today we have a</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> vaccine for yellow</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">fever but</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> that wasn't the case</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> in the</font> 1880s<font color="#CCCCCC"> when the French started</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> building</font> the Panama Canal <font color="#CCCCCC">we knew that</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> yellow fever was a thing</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">but not how it was transmitted so we</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">couldn't stop people from getting sick</font> more than<font color="#CCCCCC"> 20,000 workers</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> died of either</font> yellow fever or malaria<font color="#CCCCCC"> or a fun</font> combination<font color="#E5E5E5"> of both so</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> the</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> French quit</font> construction in 1889<font color="#E5E5E5"> it wasn't until the</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">1900s that</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> we discovered mosquitoes were</font> the culprit<font color="#E5E5E5"> and the US was able</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> to fight</font> the disease and finish the canal<font color="#CCCCCC"> they</font> drained pools of water<font color="#E5E5E5"> near towns and</font> houses which<font color="#CCCCCC"> is where mosquitoes lay</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">their eggs</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> and they covered water that</font> they couldn't drain with films of oil to smother<font color="#E5E5E5"> the</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> larvae that had already</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">hatched</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> and they dumped pesticides</font> everywhere else trying<font color="#E5E5E5"> to kill all the</font> mosquitoes they could find the last disease in our list is a bit<font color="#E5E5E5"> different</font> from the others it's<font color="#E5E5E5"> not transmitted</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">it's inherited and that's why it used to</font> be called<font color="#E5E5E5"> the Royal disease hemophilia</font> is a disorder<font color="#CCCCCC"> that makes it hard to form</font> blood clots<font color="#CCCCCC"> causing victims to bleed out</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">from minor wounds that would normally</font> seal up humans have 20<font color="#CCCCCC"> different</font> proteins that<font color="#E5E5E5"> help form blood clots but</font> hemophilia is caused by problems<font color="#E5E5E5"> in just</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">two and both of the genes involved are</font> on<font color="#E5E5E5"> the X</font> chromosome humans have 22<font color="#E5E5E5"> pairs of</font> non-sex chromosomes<font color="#CCCCCC"> so you have two</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">copies of each</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> gene plus a 23rd pair</font> that's usually either XX or XY<font color="#E5E5E5"> and you</font> get half<font color="#E5E5E5"> of your genes from each parent</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">for a dominant trait</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> you just need one</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">of</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> your two genes to express the trait</font> like having a widow's peak<font color="#E5E5E5"> recessive</font> traits on the other hand need<font color="#E5E5E5"> two copies</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">to be</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> expressed</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> so</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> people can have only</font> one copy<font color="#E5E5E5"> not express the trait</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> and still</font> pass it on<font color="#CCCCCC"> to their kids</font> they're called carriers now recessive traits on sex chromosomes can work a <font color="#CCCCCC">little differently because they're not</font> necessarily<font color="#E5E5E5"> identical people</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> who are XY</font> don't have a backup copy<font color="#E5E5E5"> of either set</font> of genes so recessive diseases caused<font color="#E5E5E5"> by</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">genes on the X chromosome just get</font> expressed<font color="#E5E5E5"> and that's exactly what</font> happened with hemophilia<font color="#E5E5E5"> historically to</font> try and remain pure Bloods the<font color="#E5E5E5"> royal</font> families of Europe<font color="#E5E5E5"> were notorious</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> for</font> incest<font color="#CCCCCC"> and two related people</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> have a</font> higher chance<font color="#E5E5E5"> of both being carriers for</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">the same recessive trait because</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> they</font> share more genes than<font color="#E5E5E5"> unrelated people</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">Queen Victoria of</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> England was a carrier</font> for<font color="#E5E5E5"> haemophilia</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> and one son and</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> three</font> grandsons bled out<font color="#E5E5E5"> from minor injuries</font> by early adulthood<font color="#E5E5E5"> the most famous of</font> her dangerously bleeding descendants was the<font color="#CCCCCC"> russian</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> prince alexei romanov</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> the</font> Romanov<font color="#CCCCCC"> family kept their only heirs</font> sickness a secret not wanting to<font color="#E5E5E5"> appear</font> weak and they put their<font color="#CCCCCC"> trust in</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> the so</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">called magical healing abilities of</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">Siberian</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> grigori rasputin the perceived</font> influence Rasputin<font color="#CCCCCC"> had over the royal</font> family led to tension with<font color="#CCCCCC"> the general</font> public<font color="#CCCCCC"> and may have hastened the</font> execution of<font color="#E5E5E5"> the royal</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> family</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> in 1918</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">during the Russian Revolution</font> so<font color="#E5E5E5"> maybe recessive disorders are why the</font> Lannisters and Targaryen<font color="#CCCCCC"> czar so messed</font> up<font color="#CCCCCC"> the perceived influence Rasputin had</font> over the royal family<font color="#E5E5E5"> led to tension</font> with<font color="#CCCCCC"> the general public and may have</font> hastened to<font color="#CCCCCC"> the execution of the royal</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">family</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> in 1918 during the Russian</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">Revolution so history is</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> shaped by lots</font> of forces especially<font color="#E5E5E5"> things like human</font> health<font color="#CCCCCC"> these six diseases caused</font> widespread death change societies and revolutionized what we know about <font color="#CCCCCC">medicine in ways that still impact us</font> today thanks for<font color="#CCCCCC"> watching this episode</font> of<font color="#E5E5E5"> scishow which is produced by</font> complexly a group of<font color="#E5E5E5"> people who believe</font> <font color="#CCCCCC">the more we learn</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> the better we get</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> it</font> being humans if you want to learn more about<font color="#E5E5E5"> human health that check out one of</font> <font color="#E5E5E5">our sister channels healthcare triage at</font> youtube.com slash healthcare triage [Music]
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Channel: SciShow
Views: 553,865
Rating: 4.9071527 out of 5
Keywords: SciShow, science, Hank, Green, education, learn, Cholera, syphilis, plague, black death, history, hemophilia, Smallpox, medicine, illness
Id: oJcmxyTltlk
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 11min 13sec (673 seconds)
Published: Sun Apr 15 2018
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