Lecture Description
July 9, 2008 presentation by Harry Greenberg for the Stanford School of Medicine Medcast lecture series.
More than 500,000 infants and children worldwide die each year from severe diarrhea caused by a rotavirus infection. Harry Greenberg, MD, co-director of the Stanford-LPCH Vaccine Program, discusses the epidemiology of this virus and the history of developing an effective vaccine.
Stanford University School of Medicine:
med.stanford.edu/
Course Index
- Is Evidence-Based Medicine a Barrier to Cost-Effective Care?
- Monoclonal Antibodies: Stanford Academia-Industry Collaboration
- The Battle of the Diets: Is Anyone Winning (At Losing?)
- The Mismeasure of Man
- New Perspectives on Menopausal Hormones and Heart Disease
- From Sickness to Health: Beethoven's Heiliger Dankgesang
- Mood Disorders Across Women's Lifecycle
- Mexican Migrant Health
- Imaging Patients with Myelopathy
- Cancer and Climate Change: Parallels in Risk Management
- The Influence of Sex/Gender on Cardiovascular Health
- Using Dendritic Cells to Create Cancer Vaccines
- Environment Degradation Begets Epidemics: Cholera in Bangladesh
- Vitamin D: It's Not Just For Bones Anymore
- The Politics and Promise of Stem Cell Research
- 21st Century Bacterial Pneumonia: Old Habits and New Approaches
- Maternal Infant Care and Challenges in East Africa
- Rebuilding Iraq's Mental Health Care System
- Cancer Biology and Cancer Medicine
- Childhood Obesity and Public Policy
- Four Big Ideas from the Carnegie Study on Medical Education
- Changes in Female Sexual Function Throughout the Lifespan
- Health Risks of Type-A Behavior
- The New Rotavirus Vaccine: The Second Time is the Charm
Course Description
MEDCAST puts you in the front row at some of the leading-edge lectures at the School of Medicine. Tune in to watch Stanford faculty and other renown experts discuss the latest advances in biomedical research, patient care and other health-related fields.
More Information: http://med.stanford.edu/medcast/