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WPT project confronts global health challenges Local health is global health, according to "Rx for SurvivalA Global Health Challenge," a multimedia project launching in fall 2005. Why? Because in an era of international travel, communicable diseases know no borders. Also, diseases that the world had nearly eradicated are coming back strong. While tuberculosis (TB) was nearly eliminated by the early 1960s, improper treatment procedures have enabled a strain of TB that is resistant to almost every known antibiotic to reemerge. Today, TB is the world's second leading cause of death by infectious disease in adults.
Tuesday, Oct. 11, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 18, 7:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 25, 7:30 p.m. The full "Rx for Survival" project includes not only the Wisconsin Public Television broadcasts and Madison-area outreach events, but the PBS companion Web site, radio stories on National Public Radio, a companion book by Philip Hilts published by Penguin Press, and a special report in the issue of Time magazine hitting newstands Oct. 31, 2005.
To learn more about modern health challenges affecting people in the United States and abroad, tune in to "Rx for SurvivalA Global Health Challenge," Nov. 1-3 on Wisconsin Public Television, or check out PBS' companion Web site. "Rx for SurvivalA Global Health Challenge" is a co-production of the WGBH/NOVA Science Unit and Vulcan Productions Inc., in association with Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health. Major funding is provided by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Merck Co. Foundation. More on this topic: One Wisconsinite's experience In 2003, Madison nurse Susan Dillon Gold volunteered in a children's home in Kenya, a country reeling from the AIDS epidemic. Read about her experiences.
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