Published: Nov. 18, 2021, 1:06 p.m.
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Paul A. Offit, MD, an attending physician in the Division of Infectious Diseases & the director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children\\u2019s Hospital of Philadelphia, a professor of vaccinology and pediatrics at the University of Pennsylvania, and member of the FDA\'s vaccine advisory committee chats with Trey Elling about YOU BET YOUR LIFE: FROM BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS TO MASS VACCINATION, THE LONG AND RISKY HISTORY OF MEDICAL INNOVATION. Questions include:
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\\n - Did any ethical issues arrive with human-to-human heart transplants before brain death was internationally defined in 1968? (03:12)
\\n - Why were blood transfusions disappear after several were performed in the mid-1600s? (05:58)
\\n - How did the rise of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s impact blood transfusions? (08:08)
\\n - How was nationalism a hindrance to anesthesia in its early days? (10:14)
\\n - Regarding antibiotics, what was the Elixir Sulfanilamide disaster of 1937? (14:35)
\\n - When examining the history of vaccines, why did he focus on the creation and administration of the polio vaccine? (17:25)
\\n - What are x-rays? (28:55)
\\n - What does mustard gas have to do with the advent of chemotherapy? (31:05)
\\n - Does the general public need a COVID vaccine booster six months after receiving their initial shots? (39:07)
\\n - How should those with immunity acquired from previous infection be looked at? (41:55)
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