Special Episode: Lina Zeldovich & The Living Medicine

The development of antibiotics was one of the greatest turning points in the history of medicine. Bacterial infections that were once death sentences were cured within a matter of days after administration of these lifesaving compounds. But the honeymoon didn’t last long, as resistant bacterial strains emerged and spread. Now, antimicrobial resistance poses one of the greatest threats to global health; frankly, we can’t invent new antibiotics faster than resistance develops. Fortunately, there may be a solution, one that has existed even before antibiotics came on the scene: phage therapy, the use of bacteriophages to treat bacterial infections. In The Living Medicine: How a Lifesaving Cure Was Nearly Lost—and Why It Will Rescue Us When Antibiotics Fail, author Lina Zeldovich takes readers through the incredible and long-forgotten story of phage therapy and the doctors who developed it. Tune in to learn how phage therapy, after almost being relegated to a footnote in the history of medicine, is reemerging as a possible solution to the deadly problem of antimicrobial resistance.

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3 thoughts on “Special Episode: Lina Zeldovich & The Living Medicine

  1. A superb episode. Thank you for doing the interview. It shows the the limitation of traditional medical appraoches and the future of individualized medicine

  2. Erin Welsh’s an amazing interviewer – I loved the episode featuring the interview with Dr. Zeldovich! I finally understand more about phages!

    Thank you!

  3. Hello! This was a really good episode. I read and reviewed the book and what struck me was the discussion of Stalin’s USSR, something I hadn’t studied (I’m a science nerd).
    I also wanted to say check out the TED Talk from Steffanie Strathdee, “How Sewage Saved My Husband’s Life from a Superbug,” a fascinating look at how her husband became sick and how bacteriophage brought him back from death’s door.

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